WEG MediaWiki

Difference between revisions of "Social: Olvana"

m (Population Movement (Migration/IDPs/Refugees))
m (Unbolded headings)
 
(73 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
''This page is a section of [[Olvana]].''
+
<div style="font-size:0.9em; color:#333;">
 +
[[Pacific|DATE Pacific]] &gt; [[Olvana]] &gt; '''{{PAGENAME}}''' &larr;You are here
 +
</div>__TOC__
 +
== Social Overview ==
 +
Olvanan culture spans more than 4,500 years.  Olvana is notable for its religious diversity, with Hinduism, Traditional Folk Religions, Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity among the nation’s major religions. For much of the country’s history, families could obtain social advancement by high performance in the prestigious imperial examinations, and a culture of merit remains greatly valued in Olvana today. Some observers see the period following the establishment of the People's Republic of Olvana as a continuation of traditional Olvanese dynastic history, while others claim that the Communist Party's rule damaged the foundations of Olvanan culture, thanks to political movements that destroyed many aspects of traditional culture. Today, the Olvanan Communist Party (OCP) seeks to change some traditional aspects such as rural land tenure, sexism, and the Confucian system of education, while preserving others, such as the family structure and culture of obedience to the state as being integral to society.
  
Olvanese culture spans more than 4,500 years. It was shaped by numerous and varied historical schools of thought: the predominant religion of Hinduism, the Upanishads, Yoga Sutras, the Bhakti movement, and Buddhism. Olvana is notable for its religious diversity, with Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Islam, Christianity, and Jainism among the nation’s major religions. For much of the country’s history, families could obtain social advancement by high performance in the prestigious imperial examinations, and a culture of merit remains greatly valued in Olvana today. Some observers see the period following the establishment of the PRO as a continuation of traditional Olvanese dynastic history, while others claim that the Communist Party's rule damaged the foundations of Olvanese culture, thanks to political movements that destroyed many aspects of traditional culture. Today, the Olvanese Communist Party (OCP) seeks to change some traditional aspects such as rural land tenure, sexism, and the Confucian system of education, while preserving others, such as the family structure and culture of obedience to the state as being integral to society.
+
=== Brief History ===
 +
After three millennia of imperial dynastic rule, the Republic of Olvana was declared in 1912 and consolidated over the next two decades. While there was no longer a royal family, much of the Olvanan culture continued just as before the republic. Internal battles often occurred over the next two decades. 
  
== Social Statistics for Olvana, Belesia, Gabal, North Torbia, and South Torbia ==
+
In 1950, the Olvanan Civil War began with the support of the world major communist powers. On 1 November 1951, the People’s Republic of Olvana (PRO) was declared by Olvanan Communist Party (OCP) Chairman Cheng Ze, establishing the present-day political body that rules Olvana. Cheng was an enthusiastic communist and began immediately to remodel the Olvanan government and economy based on the Donovian model. 
{| class="wikitable"
 
|'''Statistic'''
 
|'''Ariana'''
 
|'''Atropia'''
 
|'''Donovia'''
 
|'''Gorgas'''
 
|Limaria
 
|-
 
|'''Age  distribution (%)'''
 
|0-14 years: 21.7
 
  
15-64 years: 72.9
+
Many of the reforms Cheng tried to initiate actually hurt the poorest of the Olvanese population. It was only after Cheng’s death and modern reforms began that the lives of the Olvanese common people began to improve. The improvements were gradual, but most of the Olvanese are better off now there a half-century ago. Still, the culture underlying most of the people is based on traditions that date back centuries, if not longer. 
  
65 years and  over: 5.4
+
== Demographics ==
|0-14 years: 23.9
 
  
15-64 years: 69.4
+
=== Languages ===
 +
[[File:Olvana Map-Languages.png|left|thumb|400x400px|Primary language in Olvana by region (Placeholder)]]
 +
The official spoken language in Olvana is Mandarin-Olvanese, based on the Shanghai dialect of Eastern Olvana. Efforts to make Mandarin-Olvanese the official national language were met with opposition from minority populations. While the majority of the ethnic Olvan group population speaks Mandarin-Olvanese as their primary language, there are pockets of ethnic Olvans who speak other dialects of Olvanese. The Olvan population in the southeastern portion of Olvana speak a variety of regionally based Olvanese dialects. This has resulted in the establishment of regional and provincial “official” languages, including other Olvanese dialects such as Wu, Min, Yue, Xiang, Gan and Hakka. Non-Olvanese languages spoken widely by ethnic minorities include other Sino-Tibetic languages, some from the Lolo-Burmese family of languages, Hmongic Languages, a variety of Tai-Kadai languages, and Vietnamese. English is used as the second official language, used for many administrative, business, and higher education purposes. There are 292 living languages in Olvana, with over 1,652 dialects. Most of these are mutually unintelligible, even within dialect groups. Social groups are generally classified based on linguistic differences and, in some cases, variations in dialect are so large that subcultures speaking variations of the same language cannot communicate with each other in their mother tongues.
  
65 years and  over: 6.7
+
=== Ethnicities ===
|0-14 years: 15.2
+
[[File:Olvana Map-ethnic groups.png|thumb|434x434px|Primary ethnic groups in Olvana (Placeholder)]]
 +
Olvana has more than two thousand unique ethnic groups and subcultures, and representation from every major religion. Only the continent of Africa exceeds the linguistic, genetic, and cultural diversity of the nation of Olvana. In Olvana, the cultural difference between adjacent provinces—or even within the same province—is often as big as that between adjacent European nations.
  
15-64 years: 71.8  
+
The OCP officially recognizes 56 distinct ethnic groups within the PRO. The largest of these are the Olvan, which comprises about 91.51% of the total population. Within the Olvan ethnicity, there are numerous subcultures that stem largely from the uneven intermingling of two divergent and heterogeneous populations: the Ancestral North Olvanese and Ancestral South Olvanese. The world’s largest single ethnic group, the Olvan outnumber all of the ethnic minorities within Olvana combined. Olvana’s 55 minority ethnic groups account for about 8.49% of the population. However, the latest national census reported that while the Olvan population increased by 5.74%, the population of the 55 national minorities combined increased by 6.92%. Some minority groups are widely dispersed in small concentrations across Olvana, while others are heavily concentrated in regions or even single provinces.
  
65 years and over: 13
+
During the Olvanese dynastic era divided the Olvanese population into a caste system, a practice dating to at least 221 BCE. The list of scheduled castes stemmed from an original classification of landlord, peasant, artisan, and merchant. Theoretically, except for the position of the Emperor, nothing was hereditary. Elimination of these class divisions was a root cause of the Olvanan Civil War following World War II. However, despite official claims that the caste system is gone and numerous laws that theoretically prevent class discrimination, the social stratification related to the caste system is still present throughout much of Olvan society, particularly in Hindu majority areas.  That said, continued urbanization and affirmative action programs are leading to a decline in discriminatory practices.
|0-14 years: 16.1
 
  
15-64 years: 67.6
+
While innumerable tensions and conflicts between the ethnic Olvans and minority groups were common throughout Olvana's history, today many of the minority communities have either been integrated or assimilated into Olvan society. That said, attempts to preserve minority cultures and languages have been successful. Those minority groups who have rejected Olvan efforts of acculturation often find themselves at an economic disadvantage. Though it is not part of any official policy, many Olvan people have migrated from Olvan majority areas into regions with larger minority populations. This has resulted in a demographic shift, and increased acculturation simply due to the fact that the minority population is exposed to more Olvan influence.
  
65 years and  over: 16.4
+
The following table lists some of the larger minority ethnicities found within Olvana:
|0-14 years: 18.2
+
{| class="wikitable"
 
+
|Bai
15-64 years: 71.1
+
|Kam (Dong)
 
+
|Muong
65 years and  over: 10.6
+
|Thai
 
|-
 
|-
| 
+
|Dongxiang
'''Median  age'''
+
|Kinh (Vietnamese)
|Total:  26.3
+
|Nùng
 
+
|Tibetan
Male: 26
 
 
 
Female: 26.5
 
|Total: 28.5
 
 
 
Male: 26.9
 
 
 
Female: 30.3
 
|Total: 38.7
 
 
 
Male: 35.5
 
 
 
Female: 41.9
 
|Total: 38.8
 
 
 
Male: 36.3
 
 
 
Female: 41.3
 
|Total: 31.9
 
 
 
Male: 29.1
 
 
 
Female: 34.7
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Population'''
+
|Hani
 
+
|Li
'''Growth rate'''
+
|Nùng
 
+
|Yi
'''(Rank)'''
 
|77,891, 220
 
 
 
1.248%
 
 
 
(94)
 
|8,372,373
 
 
 
0.846%
 
 
 
(129)
 
|82,008,765
 
 
 
-0.47%
 
 
 
(223)
 
|4,585,874
 
 
 
-0.326%
 
 
 
(217)
 
|2,967,975
 
 
 
0.063%
 
 
 
(188)
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Birth  rate'''
+
|Hui
 
+
|Miao (Hmung/Mong)
'''per  1,000'''
+
|Tày
 
+
|Zhuang
'''(Rank)'''
+
|}
|17.17
 
 
 
(120)
 
|17.62
 
 
 
(117)
 
|11.05
 
 
 
(174)
 
|10.66
 
  
(181)
+
=== Religions ===
|12.65
+
[[File:Olvana Religions 20210301.png|left|thumb|498x498px|Olvana Religions (Placeholder)]]
 +
A diversity of religious beliefs and practices combined with a predominant Hindu majority characterizes religion in Olvana. Olvana is a secular state in accordance with the Constitution and the government of Olvana is officially atheist. However, religion plays a central and definitive role in the daily life of the population. While the Constitution theoretically guarantees freedom of religion, religious organizations that lack official approval can be subject to state persecution. The State Administration for Religious Affairs oversees religious affairs and issues in the country and frequently takes a very biased pro-Hindu stance, reflecting the religious makeup of the country.
 +
[[File:Olvana Map-Religions-2nd More Detailed.png|thumb|600x600px|Religious Distribution in Olvana (Placeholder)]]
 +
The OCP officially banned religion following the revolution, both as a standard Communist precept and as part of the effort to remove the Hindu-based caste system. Initially, there was widespread suppression and persecution of religious leaders. Over time, the Party recognized the unlikelihood of the people abandoning Hinduism altogether and have slowly become more tolerant of religious activities. However, it continues to use its officially atheistic status to suppress non-Hindus in certain provinces.
  
(161)
+
Excluding party officials, whom the government bans from belonging to a religious organization, 74.8% of Olvanans are religious, while roughly 25.2% of Olvanans are unaffiliated. Atheism and agnostics have visible influence in Olvana, often taking a Confucian bent, along with a self-ascribed tolerance to other faiths. Nationally, the Olvanan religious population comprises 34% Hindus, 32% Olvan Folk Religion, 2.5% Muslims, 2.3% Christians, , 1.0% Buddhists, Less than 2.0% of the population practices some form of indigenous ethnically folk religion, with the Kinh Folk Religion found near Hanoi being the largest. Hinduism and the Olvan Folk Religion are the predominant belief systems within Olvana. Both faiths are closely linked to the Olvan identity.
|-
 
|'''Death  rate'''
 
  
'''per  1,000'''
+
The vast majority of Olvanans engage in religious rituals on a daily basis whether they are actually religious or not. While many Olvanans are not adherents to any particular faith, many religious practices have become highly engrained throughout their community and personal life. These rituals, however, are widely diverse specific not only their belief system, but also region, village, and individual.
  
'''(Rank)'''
+
Historically, conflict has stemmed from the competing ideologies of Hindu nationalism and Olvan Folk Traditions. Additional faith based friction can be seen in the relationship between the government’s stance of secularism and the Muslim minority in the northwest, and the regional suppression of Buddhism and Christianity. One of the major contributing factors to religious conflicts in Olvana was a previous lack of education among the masses and the ease with which corrupt politicians could take advantage of the same. Even though freedom of religion is an integral part of the Olvanan constitution, the inability to hold communal mobs accountable has accentuated the occasional religious conflicts.
|5.72
 
  
(171)
+
=== Education ===
|8.30
+
Education is considered extremely important in Olvana by both the government and by families. For most families in the middle class and above, there is pressure to do well academically in school. Families will often sacrifice to obtain a good education for their child.
  
(101)
+
==== Literacy Rate ====
|16.04
+
The official overall literacy rate as declared by the PRO government is 96.4%. This is 98.3% for males and 94.4% for females.
  
(5)
+
==== Educational System ====
|9.65
+
Compulsory education in Olvana is comprised of primary and junior secondary schools, which together cover the nine years between the ages of 6 and 15. The government pledges to provide this education completely free, including textbooks and fees. However, while annual education investment has increased fivefold over the past decade, there remains an inequality in education spending. Annual education expenditure per secondary school student in the capital totals $3,395, while the poorest provinces spend only $543 per student. There are 311,588 primary schools, 73,948 secondary schools, and 1,756 higher education institutions in Olvana. In 1949, only 20% of the population could read, compared to 94% today. Within the last decade, Olvanan students achieved the world's best results in mathematics, science, and literacy, as tested in a worldwide evaluation of 15-year-old school pupils' scholastic performance.
  
(68)
+
==== Educational Attainment ====
|8.39
+
Despite the impressive results in literacy improvement since 1950, Olvanan education faces both native and international criticism for its emphasis on rote memorization and its gap in quality from rural to urban areas. Although the rural-urban literacy gap has dropped from 21.2% to 16.1% over the last decade, the difference between most literate province (93.9%) and least (63.8%) is still vast. Students without political connections are frequently barred from higher education because educational administrative departments and local authorities hold the right of admission to a large number of universities.
  
(97)
+
== Population Density ==
|-
 
|'''Net'''
 
  
'''Migration'''
+
=== Overview ===
 +
[[File:Olvana Map-Population Density.png|left|thumb|413x413px|Olvana Population Density (Placeholder)]]
 +
The official population of Olvana is 1,123,348,142. Eastern coastal provinces are much more densely populated than the western interior. About 16.60% of the population is 14 years old or younger, 70.14% is between 15 and 59 years old, and 13.26% is over 60 years old, with a median age of 37.4. The population growth rate is an annual average of 0.59% and the human gender ratio is 940 females per 1,000 males. The urban/rural split is 87% urban and 13% rural, with 13% residing within megacities. The five largest cities in Olvana are: 1) Shanghai; 2) Chongqing; 3) Guangzhou; 4) Wuhan; and 5) Hong Kong.
  
'''rate per'''
+
=== Urban Areas ===
 +
Olvana is one of the most populated countries in the world and its national population density is 310 per square kilometer. The overall national density, however, does not account for major variations by region. Broadly speaking, the vast majority of the population lives in and around coastal cities and river deltas. In the east, the population density is 482/sq. km, while the southwest averages 116/sq. km. Population crowding in urban areas raises concerns within the government that there will be widespread unemployment and political instability. The population of Olvana is projected to continue growing, reaching 1.5 billion within ten years, and peak of 1.65 billion within 25 years. However, the population is then projected to decline heavily, falling below 1 billion by the next century. This is decline is due to socioeconomic factors, not Olvanan government policy.
 +
* Shanghai: pop. 29,870,751 (Metropolitan Area    53,137,280)
 +
* Chongqing: pop. 17,539,169 (Metropolitan Area    37,180,905)
 +
* Guangzhou: pop. 15,722,194 (Metropolitan Area 65,443,039
 +
* Wuhan: pop. 11,142,260 (Metropolitan Area 29,225,020)
 +
* Hong Kong: pop. 10,423,553 (Metropolitan Area 10,423,553)
  
'''1,000'''
+
=== Rural Areas ===
 +
Discounting urban dwellers, sections of the western portions of the country rarely achieving density greater than 4/sq. km.
  
'''(Rank)'''
+
== Population Movement ==
|<nowiki>-2.62</nowiki>
 
  
(141)
+
=== Internal Migration ===
|<nowiki>-1.69</nowiki>
+
Most internal migration is movement from the rural areas to urban areas as people seek jobs as the local farming practices continue to modernize and reduce the manpower required to farm.
  
(129)
+
==== Urbanization ====
|0.29
+
The current urban population is 87% with an annual urbanization rate of 0.7%. Internal migration in Olvana is one of the most extensive in the world. Over the last forty years, the urban population has grown 242%, three-fourths of which was attributable to net migration and urban reclassification—the largest such volume of urban migration in history. Olvana has also undertaken a policy of forced urbanization, wherein rather than relying on economic drivers to push/pull rural populations toward cities in an uncontrolled manner, the government is systematically selecting and moving entire villages at a time. While controversial to western governments, this process has enabled Olvana to ensure that its infrastructure is prepared for population growth before-hand, rather than trying to update failing infrastructure after the population has already exceeded its capacity. The Olvanan population seems split on whether they approve or disprove of this policy.  Many enjoy the immediate benefit of modern housing that surpasses anything they could have encountered in their rural setting. However some, particularly those from minority groups, view the forced urbanization as the government’s attempt to separate them from their past, their culture, and their community.
  
(68)
+
==== Displacement ====
|<nowiki>-4.26</nowiki>
 
  
(157)
+
===== Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) =====
|<nowiki>-4.56</nowiki>
+
The population within Olvana is so vast, that small groups of IDPs can go almost unnoticed to outside observers. Olvanans can become displaced for a wide range of reasons, both natural and man-made. Displacement due to natural disasters is perhaps the most common occurrence.  At any given time, different regions within Olvana may be experiencing different extremes. The impact of a drought or a heavy monsoon season may destroy a community’s local economy, forcing many to relocate. Floods, though less common than in the [null paston] [[# msocom 1|[PHDCUU1]]] the major rivers thanks to the construction of large dams, are an ever present risk. The summer monsoon season has been known to create stationary fronts that produce extremely heavy rainfall, and can cause significant damage to infrastructure. In some cases, poverty can be a driver of displacement, with some of the poorest Olvanans being forced from their homes due to economically driven development. 
  
(159)
+
Waves of Olvanan emigration occurred from the 19th century through the mid-20th century, primarily as a result of internal conflict, starvation, invasion from various foreign countries, and problems resulting from political corruption. Most immigrants were unskilled laborers, and often illiterate.  The diaspora has spread all over the world, but is perhaps most heavily focused in the Americas, southern Africa, and other parts of Asia. After the Communist revolution, the government enacted strict controls to prevent large numbers of people from leaving the country.
|-
 
|'''Urban'''
 
  
'''population'''
+
===== Stateless Personnel =====
 +
There are an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 children in Olvana that were born to North Torbian mothers who had fled their homeland during the Torbian War. While the mothers are technically citizens of North Torbia, they often did not want to return, and many times they wound up becoming victims of human trafficking. The children who were born in Olvana, are not given a nationality, and often lack access to education, healthcare, and basic rights.
  
'''Annual'''
+
==== Migration Cycles and Transhumance ====
 +
Transhumance occurs throughout Olvana in rural regions where the availability of fodder for livestock might vary depending on the season. The practice has become less common as food production in more heavily populated areas has become more modernized. That said, in northwestern Olvana, there remains groups of nomadic and seminomadic peoples that raise cattle, sheep, goats, and horses that travel from place to place based on the seasons. These populations are primarily found in arid regions associated with the Tibetan Plateau and the Mongolian Steppe. For those peoples living in Olvana, it is not uncommon for them to cross the borders with neighboring nations, however their movements are strictly monitored by the Olvanan authorities. These are very small numbers compared to the overall Olvanan population and are usually at great distances from any major city.
  
'''urbanization'''
+
=== External Migration ===
 +
Most external migration in Olvana is economically related, but there are some cases of forced migration. This is not unexpected in the case of such a large country such as Olvana and the number of countries neighboring it.
  
'''rate'''
+
==== Inbound ====
|68%
+
Most inbound migration is related to the economic situation in Olvana. With its huge population, many companies in foreign countries see Olvana as the next boom site for their consumer goods.
  
2.1%
+
===== Economic Migration =====
|52%
+
Migrant workers account for 36% of the total workforce in Olvana. Two-thirds of these workers are male. Current government estimates indicate that within the next ten years, this number will grow to 40% of the urban population. In general, while urbanization provides Olvanan workers with more opportunity, it also constrains them, since the government excludes rural-urban migrant workers from local educational resources, citywide social welfare programs and many jobs. Additionally, potential employers view migrant workers—especially females—as replaceable labor, and generally offer much lower wages. Furthermore, the government will forcibly move migrant workers out of the coastal urban areas and into the rural interior based on agricultural labor needs, irrespective of the migrant workers’ origins. Relatively small levels of immigration came as the result of government-offered various incentives intended to repatriate part of the Olvanan diaspora. The government settled many of those returning on various islands in the South China Sea. In order to obtain hard currency, North Torbia actually provides manual labor to Olvana and opened Torbian restaurants in most major Olvanan cities. Many countries conduct business in Olvana and some of these representatives live in the country on an almost permanent basis.
  
1.0%
+
===== Forced Migration =====
|67%
+
Over the last decade, Olvana has accepted over 300,000 refugees from Africa and Asia displaced due to natural disasters, famine, disease outbreak, and war. The term refugee, however, is not used by the Olvanan government. Instead, their official position is that these migrants were accepted as part of a work program sponsorship; these individuals are expected to return to their homeland.
  
-0.2%
+
==== Outbound ====
|53%
+
Most modern outbound emigrants are temporary. The Olvanan government often reinforces a national narrative that emphasizes the cultural link between the history of the ethnic Olvan people and the Olvanan government. This effort intended to ensure that ex-patriot Olvanans maintain a close personal connection to their homeland. These efforts are aimed at both contemporary migrants, as the broader diaspora who may have fled following the revolution.
  
-0.6%
+
===== Economic Migration =====
|64%
+
Liberalized emigration policies enacted in the 1980s, facilitated the legal departure of increasing numbers of Olvanans, who joined their overseas relatives. Additionally, a modernization program allowed Olvanan students and scholars—especially engineers—to attend foreign education and research institutions, bringing increased contact with industrialized nations. These students are expected to return home to Olvana, however, and share their education and skills to improve Olvana for its people.
  
-0.3%
+
===== Forced Migration =====
|-
+
Shortly after the revolution, the communist party often forced minority groups to flee the country (e.g., many Tibetans), however modern Olvana has moved away from forcibly expelling populations, and instead has adopted a policy of reeducation, acculturation, and assimilation.
|'''Infant'''
 
  
'''mortality'''
+
== Culture ==
 +
Due to the fact that Olvana’s population is so diverse, it is difficult to identify national traits that cover the entire population. The following section focuses solely on ethnic Olvans, who make up the majority of the population within Olvana, and whose culture has played the most formative role on the modern state. There may be a high degree of variance between the majority Olvans and other ethnic minorities.
  
'''rate'''
+
=== Dimensions of National Culture ===
 +
There are studies that show that there are six basic cultural traits, or dimensions, that can be used to better understand a national culture. While these studies are not encompassing they can provide a foundational understanding of how populations may differ. Power distance is whether the society accepts unequal distribution of power or they seek to more evenly distribute the power. Individualism is whether the society desires each person to be a separate entity or if the individual is just a cog in the societal wheel. Uncertainty avoidance is whether the society tolerates ambiguity in life or wants life to be more certain. Some societies look long-term and save while others do not see the need because the future planned may never arrive.. Restrained societies live to work while indulgent societies work to live. Some societies encourage individuals to be competitive and do their best while other societies value cooperation over individual success.
  
'''(Rank)'''
+
==== Power Distance ====
|35.78
+
Olvana’s long history with a caste system has imprinted a social belief that individuals should not have aspirations beyond their social status. With a score of 82 on the Hofstede scale, Olvanans believe that inequalities amongst the people are acceptable despite the communist origins of the government. Typically authority figures have almost total control over their subordinates and for the most part, the people do not question directives from an authority. While this trait has its foundation in the ethnic Olvan culture, the Communist Party of Olvana has made every effort to emphasize and promote a higher degree of power distance, in part to suppress dissident ideas.
  
(71)
+
===== Individualism vs. Collectivism =====
|54.6
+
With an Hofstede score of 18, Olvana is collectivist culture where the needs of the group outweigh any individual preferences. In business and social groups, while there is commitment to the internal group, there is hostility to any outsiders. Personal relationships are more important than the task or even the success of the business as long as the group prospers in the long-term. Though not unheard of in northern Olvana, southern Olvanans are who adhere to Olvan Folk religious beliefs are known for viewing their community not just in terms of spatial relativity but also with relation to time. This temporal view reinforces the importance of the role of one’s ancestors in day to day life, and can impact the factors that an individual may take into account when they are making a decision.
  
(46)
+
===== Uncertainty Avoidance (Tolerance for Ambiguity) =====
|10.08
+
Olvana has a score of 28 on the Hofstede scale making it a country is comfortable with ambiguity. Olvanans believe that rules must be followed, but that does not always mean that the laws will be obeyed. Most Olvanans are comfortable with ambiguity in most situations. This comfort with ambiguity can be observed in the inherent ambiguity of meanings found within Olvan languages.
  
(147)
+
===== Long-Term Orientation vs. Short-Term Orientation =====
|16.22
+
Olvana is a very pragmatic culture score an 85 in the Hofstede scoring system. High scores indicate the country encourages thrift and efforts to create a modern education system. Olvanans are pragmatic people and that the truth depends very much on the situation, time, and the context of the event. Olvanans are willing to adapt old traditions to changing conditions and possess a strong desire to save, invest, be thrifty, and persevere through difficult times.
  
(121)
+
===== Indulgence vs. Restraint =====
|20.21
+
With a score of 22, Olvana is a very restrained society. Countries with this score tend to cynicism and pessimism. There is little emphasis on leisure time and gratification of desires in Olvana, but that may be changing as some people are being more affluent. Most Olvanans are restrained by societal norms and feel that overindulgence is wrong.
  
(104)
+
===== Competitiveness vs. Consensus =====
|-
+
Despite the collective attitude of the people, the Hofstede score of 68 makes Olvana a competitive society. Olvanans will put the priorities of the work and state above their own leisure and even the families. The students care about their test scores and workers will take jobs in distant places if it means better pay. Leisure time is not important to most Olvanans.
|'''Life'''
 
  
'''expectancy'''
+
=== Cultural Norms and Values ===
 +
Olvana with its rich history dating back over two millennia and separatism from most of the rest of the world until about 500 years ago, has developed several core concepts in its culture:
  
'''at birth in'''
+
==== Restraint ====
 +
Most Olvanans are usually very modest people. They do not like to stand out from others in dress or in their actions.
  
'''years'''
+
==== Filial Piety ====
 +
Olvanans believe that someone older than oneself should be honored for their experience and wisdom. This is a Confucian idea where elders are honored in the family, work, and the public.
  
'''(Rank)'''
+
==== Networking ====
|Total: 71.14
+
Olvanans cultivate relationships to get ahead—both in society and in business. This networking is important to move up in society—even if it is just within the group, office, or business that the individual is a member.
  
Male: 69.65
+
==== Interdependence ====
 +
This is almost a sub-category of the previous value where people rely on other people to succeed. The success of the group depends on this interdependence and individuals are to play their role in creating this success.
  
Female: 72.72
+
==== Fortitude ====
 +
Olvanans are very serious people. It is rare that Olvanans will let outsiders see them laughing and having a good time. Years of marginal living have made Olvanans somber, but will adjust to any new adversities.
  
(132)
+
==== Saving Face ====
|Total: 66.66
+
Olvanans hate humiliation or embarrassment. They will often do things that outsiders do not understand because they do not wish to embarrass others or their selves.
  
Male: 62.53
+
==== Unamity ====
 +
The Olvanan people are a much unified people who want to make their country great again. For many years, Olvana was at the mercy of European colonial powers and now that Olvana’s economic performance has pushed them to the top of the world stage, the people want to help the country stay there.
  
Female: 71.34
+
== Centers of Social Power ==
 +
Olvana’s social structure stems from an intermingling of acceptance and revolution against the feudal society of Imperial Olvana. This resulted in the ancient caste system evolving into a ''de facto'' four-class system, despite Olvana being officially a “classless” society. Prior to the Olvanan Civil War, traditional Olvanese society was organized into a hierarchic system of socio-economic classes known as the four castes, based on occupations, all under an umbrella of the monarchy. These castes were scholars and priests, administrators and warriors, artisans and merchants, and peasants and laboring classes. Within this system were thousands of additional sub-categories, both formal and informal, generally based on perceived cleanliness of the profession. For example, those who worked with the land ranked higher than those who worked with animals. At the bottom of the social structure, although not an official caste, were the casteless or untouchables. Movement with the castes was possible through the Imperial examinations, with the highest achievers becoming elite scholar-officials. However, true success was available only to males who could afford test preparation.  
  
(157)
+
A major factor inducing the Cheng Revolution was an effort to remove the economic oppression facing the peasantry and the untouchables. While the Civil War theoretically ended the caste system, in practice, it replaced it with a different class structure, while informally retaining much of the old caste system. Under this new class structure, OCP members were the top social stratum, essentially replacing the religious and scholarly class. The status of the caste system today is somewhat muddled. The Revolutionary Manifesto and subsequent Constitution officially disregarded class distinction and eliminated the untouchable “class.” In practice, however, the social distinctions, stigmas, and advantages remained.
|Total: 66.29
 
  
Male: 59.8
+
The oldest male member is typically the head in the Olvanan family system. He makes important family decisions and rules, which other family members are likely to abide by. Several generations of extended family historically lived under one roof, or on the same land. However, urbanization and economic development, led to a breakup of this traditional multi-family model into a single-family structure. In rural settings, the male typically holds all or most of the authority and youth are less likely to leave the household. In urban environments, the husband and wife usually share authority, with the wife having more authority in the home while the husband handles finances. An overwhelming majority of Olvanan marriages are arranged by parents or elders in the family. In a sign of changing times, however, these arranged marriages today are generally consensual. The divorce rate is extremely low: only 1.6% of marriages end in divorce. This figure is rising, with increases in female education and economic independence. Child marriages are common in the most rural areas, with many women informally marrying prior to the legal marriageable age of 18.
  
Female: 73.17
+
Olvanan lineage—or clan—is a patrilineal line of people with a common surname, who share a common ancestor and, in many cases, an ancestral home. Olvanan kinship tends to be strong in southern, northwestern, and many rural areas throughout Olvana In the rural areas, clans influence local politics, and positioning themselves within the OCP, and among committees. .. Clan structures tend to be weaker in areas closer to Olvana’s coast, and they do not seem to play much of a role in the day to day lives of urban Olvanans. This reduction in influence is likely the result of greater population densities, the OCP’s education policies, and the central government’s need to industrialize.
  
(162)
+
Mimicking traditional dynastic power structures, political elites within the OCP hold a level of hereditary power. Recent anti-corruption reformations, however, began breaking down these political dynasties. Though party elites retain a significant level of social power, there is longer a guarantee of familial succession. Instead, the OCP is developing a new political elite that is more of a meritocracy, comprised of those with both party loyalty and business acumen.
|Total: 76.72
 
  
Male: 73.41
+
== Communication ==
  
Female: 80.45
+
=== Traditional Methods and Symbolism ===
 +
The Olvanan family of languages uses symbols and characters to represent words and meanings (as opposed to a western alphabet in which characters represent sounds to form words). It takes years to learn the language. To graduate from high school, an Olvanan student usually has to know at least 30,000 different symbols. It is one of the most difficult languages in the world. Most students begin learning English in elementary school. Students that study abroad in English speaking countries are usually very good English speakers. Those that spend several years in the U.S. usually go home even more confident in their language abilities. Minority communities that have their own languages will often use the appropriate form of Olvanan when in public (especially around government figures), but when they are at home or in the relative privacy of their ethnic community they will use their native language.
  
(62)
+
=== Role of Technology and Media ===
|Total: 72.68
+
Olvana has embraced the computer generation and the information age setting up 5G technology towers throughout the country. Most Olvanans have cell phones and can access the Internet. Many Olvanans went directly from no telephone access to a cellular model bypassing the landline stage. Olvana is not adverse to stealing patents from other countries and reverse engineering equipment in order to reproduce it in their own country. 
  
Male: 69.06
+
The media is controlled by the PRO government. The government has a message to put out and they will go to great links to make sure that message is received not only by the internal audience in Olvana, but the rest of the world as well. All the construction that Olvana does in the region and the rest of the world is put out in positive messages that Olvana is helping the other country out. It makes Olvana look benevolent and hides any ulterior motives.
  
Female: 76.81
+
== Social Impacts of OE Hazards ==
  
(118)
+
=== Disease ===
|-
+
There are six major diseases in Olvana. Since the country is so large, some of these diseases may only affect a small portion of the country. These six diseases are bacterial diarrhea, COVID, hepatitis A, hantaviral hemorrhagic fever, Japanese encephalitis, and typhoid fever (see Physical Environment variable for more information on these diseases). Many of these diseases are related to poor water purification methods and occur more frequently in rural communities than in the urban areas. Some of these diseases have no known cure or vaccination and/or are very expensive for treatment. Poor Olvanans often cannot afford modern care, and instead resort to care offered by under-supplied local government-approved doctors that have few resources to combat the diseases. Some communities will also practice traditional forms of medicine.
|'''Fertility'''
 
  
'''rate'''
+
==== Bacterial Diarrhea ====
 +
There are many different types of bacteria that can cause diarrhea and most enter the body through contaminated food or water. This disease is more prevalent in the rural areas of Olvana, the country’s larger cities are not immune to it. Most of those affected in the urban areas are under five years old and in the poorest sections of the cities, often because they cannot afford to seek out treatment.
  
'''(Children'''
+
==== COVID ====
 +
This is an infectious disease caused by the worlds’ most recently discovered coronavirus. It is believed to have started in Olvana, but the government denies these claims. Symptoms are fever or chills; cough; shortness of breath or difficulty breathing; fatigue; muscle or body aches; headaches; loss of taste or smell; sore throat; congestion or runny nose; nausea or vomiting; and diarrhea. COVID victims should seek medical help if they have trouble breathing; persistent pain or pressure in the chest; new confusion; inability to wake up or stay awake; or bluish lips or face. Symptoms may occur from two to fourteen days after exposure to the virus. COVID can be deadly for those over the age of 70 or those with pre-existing medical conditions such as asthma, diabetes, or heart disease. Many people may have COVID and be asymptomatic. Self-isolation is important if one has the disease or if exposed to someone with the disease. In most modern countries, the survival rate of those affected are above 98%. Treatment is rest, fluids, and use of a ventilator if it is necessary.
  
'''per woman)'''
+
==== Hepatitis A ====
 +
Most Hepatitis A cases are linked to the poor hygiene of food handlers in Olvana’s open air markets. Hepatitis A normally is found in shellfish, uncooked vegetables, or raw fruit. More cases are found in the rural areas of the country as the government does a better job of inspecting the markets in larger cities. About 10 years ago, the Olvana government began immunizing children for Hepatitis A and thus the average age for those affected by the disease continues to increase just as the overall numbers have decreased in the same time period. Males are more likely to get the disease than females due to their occupation. Manual laborers usually account for about 70% of the Hepatitis A cases each year, probably due to poor hygiene practices when eating.
  
'''(Rank)'''
+
==== Hantaviral Hemorrhagic Fever ====
|1.70
+
Usually carried by rodents, hemorrhagic fever is caused by a family of Hantaviruses. Symptoms occur one to two weeks after exposure, but could take up to eight weeks to develop. Symptoms include intense headaches; back and abdominal pain; fever; chills; nausea; and blurred vision. Some individuals may have a flushing of the face, redness around the eyes, or a rash. Complete recovery can take weeks or months. The virus is treated by managing the patient’s fluid levels (proper hydration) and their electrolyte (sodium, potassium, & chloride) levels; maintenance of proper oxygen and blood pressure levels; and appropriate treatment of any secondary infections. The fatality rate can reach up to 15% of those infected.  Prevention is the best medicine by avoiding rodent urine, droppings, saliva, and nesting materials.
  
(171)
+
==== Japanese Encephalitis ====
|2.03
+
This is a leading cause of encephalitis in Asia and the Western Pacific with about one in four cases being fatal for those that develop a clinical illness. People get Japanese Encephalitis from infected mosquitoes so prevention is key. Wear insect repellent, long-sleeved shirts, and long pants. Most importantly, there is a vaccine to prevent it. Less than 1% of people infected with JE develop a clinical illness. The incubation time from exposure to displaying symptoms is about five to fifteen days. Symptoms include fever, headache, and vomiting. Children often suffer seizures. There are no specific treatment for JE, but supportive care and close observation is required. The patient needs to rest, drink lots of fluid, and use pain relievers to reduce the fever. About 30% to 50% that survive JE will continue to have neurologic, cognitive, or psychiatric symptoms related to the disease.
  
(127)
+
==== Typhoid Fever ====
|1.42
+
Poor water purification is the standard cause of typhoid fever as it normally enters the body from drinking water contaminated with the feces of an infected person. The death rate for typhoid fever without antibiotics is about 20%, but most Olvanans survive if they are diagnosed properly. The Olvana government continues to improve the drinking water cleanliness in the rural areas and this has created a downward trend in the number of typhoid fever cases over the last decade.
  
(197)
+
=== Natural Disaster ===
|1.44
+
Due to its large size, Olvana is susceptible to all every type of major natural disaster except volcanic eruptions. These include the following:
  
(190)
+
==== Earthquakes ====
|1.36
+
Almost annually, there is a major earthquake in some part of Olvana. The government usually responds rapidly to take care of the situation. The government usually helps the affected people rebuild their houses. While most have occurred on or near the Tibetan Plateau in the western portion of the country, they have been known to occur on the coastline as well. Earthquakes occurring in the South China Sea or the East China Sea have been known to produce Tsunami.
  
(201)
+
==== Typhoons ====
|-
+
Olvana is affected by typhoons that usually come from the south. Rarely, the typhoons will come from the east, but the prevailing winds usually prevent this type of path.
|'''Major diseases in the OE'''
 
|0  Diarrheal diseases
 
  
0  Hepatitis A
+
==== Floods ====
 +
Flooding occurs throughout Olvana due to the summer monsoon season, and by typhoons in coastal areas. There are several major rivers in Olvana that have large dams that can control river levels, however the majority of tributaries are not dammed to prevent downstream flowing.  While these dams have helped Olvana stave off potential floods like those seen in the early 20<sup>th</sup> century, without a large investment in continued upkeep, it is only a matter of time until flood waters overtake a dam. Typically when floods occur, the military is often brought in to help sandbag areas and to help in the relief recovery efforts.
  
0 Malaria
+
==== Droughts ====
 +
The reverse is also true that some parts of Olvana, particular in the west, are susceptible to seasonal droughts. When the droughts come at the wrong time of the year, these can have a devastating effect on the local farmers. Northwestern Olvana in particular, is dependent upon the freshwater flowing from melting mountain snows in the spring. When this source of freshwater is limited, it can have a devastating impact on the local economies and communities.
  
0 Crimean-Congo
+
==== Sandstorms/Dust Storms ====
 +
Sandstorms, or dust-storms, can occur during any part of the year within Olvana, however they are more common during the spring months. In the drier parts of Olvana, especially the more west one travels, there are sandstorms that can cause problems for travelers and locals. Usually these sandstorms are of short duration, but there have been instances of them lasting for several days. While smaller sandstorms are fairly common in the northwestern region of Olvana, large storms are capable of depositing dust and sand as far east as Shanghai. The impact of these storms is not as immediately evident as the impact of the monsoon season, instead, these dust-storms are believed to have a significant impact on the population’s health, particularly those with respiratory issues.
  
0  Hemorrhagic fever
+
== Social Volatility/Fragility ==
  
0 Cutaneous
+
=== Social Fault Lines and Friction Points ===
 +
Social issues in Olvana are significant and wide-ranging. They are a combined result of vestiges from the Cheng Revolution, Olvana’s political and cultural history, and Olvana’s immense population. Because of the vast number of social problems that exist, Olvana’s government faces considerable difficulty in trying to remedy the issues. The Olvanan media exposes some of these issues, while in other cases, the government censors politically sensitive issues. The combination of social issues and unsustainable economic growth has the potential, in the long term, to destabilize the nation and threaten the dominance of the OCP.
  
0 Leishmaniasis
+
Many of the potential fissures within Olvanan society are the result of historical socio-cultural preferences and/or differences. Caste-related violence in central Olvana has been on the rise despite the government’s official position banning the practice of caste discrimination. Last year, there were a reported 31,440 cases of violent acts committed against the so-called “untouchable” caste. These equate to approximately 50.4 violent acts per 10,000 people, up from 1.3 cases a decade earlier.  Historically, despite the fact that they are both from the Olvan ethnicity, the Hindu populations in central Olvana have had tensions with the non-Hindu Olvan populations to the east, particularly in the Central Plains. The land set between the Yellow River and the Yangtze River, part of the Henan Province to the north and Hubei Province to the south has been a historical point of tension between the two populations. Believed to be the birthplace of Olvan civilization, this area holds great significance to practitioners of both faiths. The communist government has sought to reduce tensions, often mediating disputes, and in some cases even turning a blind eye to practices that would otherwise be illegal, all in order to avoid the outbreak of violence.
  
0 Leptospirosis
+
While the communist party has been able to keep a lid on religious tensions within the Central Plains of Olvana, it has struggled to make inroads with the Muslim populations in the northwest of the country. These populations tend to have significant reactions to overly secular, or as they see it anti-Islamic laws. The Islamic population in Olvana is also struggling to come to terms with the growing influence of extremely conservative forms of Islam being imported from the Middle East, which has led to some radicalization among disenfranchised youth.
  
0 Schistosomiasis
+
Southwestern Olvana, particularly the areas around Hanoi and within the watershed of the Red River (Hong River), has perhaps been the most challenging area for the OCP to gain influence. Grounded in historical animosity between the diverse peoples of the Red River basin and the Olvan empires, the area has a fierce independence streak. The Red River basin is by no means a homogenous population, with a variety of ethnic and linguistic groups living in close proximity. The population closer to the delta typically speaks Vietnamese (an Austroasiatic language), while the more inland populations speak a variety of Kra-dai family of languages.
  
0 Hepatitis
+
Modern fault lines also exist as a result of what some people perceive as overreach by the OCP and government. Sources of unrest within the nation include resistance to media censorship, dissatisfaction with corrupt government officials, unfair treatment by local governments and businesses due to land and expropriation issues, and political persecution following expressions of dissent. The OCP attempts a balancing act by allowing limited forms of dissent, seeking to lessen political tension by offering mild protest as a release valve. Government officials and intellectual elites both have greater access to non-government approved sources of information; they can publish dissenting works that the ordinary citizen would not be allowed to do. However, authorities silence debates that begin to take on a life of their own, and refuse to recognize the right of the average Olvanan citizens to publish their opinions on political issues free from government censorship. Therefore, while the government encourages the state-controlled media to engage in targeted reporting on corruption, it will not tolerate similar criticisms from private individuals.
  
0 Tuberculosis
+
Despite significant barriers to publication access and the inherent dangers of criticizing a totalitarian regime, members of Olvana’s "free-speech elite" can express concerns and criticism regarding the government with less fear of punishment than the average citizen. This group is composed of senior government and OCP leaders, those with the patronage of such leaders, the professional and financial elite and—to a lesser extent—academics and journalism professionals. Olvanan authorities recognize that limited freedom of expression enables the government to better monitor potentially problematic social issues and thus tolerate limited criticism, but only from the aforementioned categories of people, and only in government-controlled forums. Doing this serves to lessen political tension by serving as a release valve for discontent, deflects criticism that citizens of Olvana do not enjoy freedom of expression, and enables government authorities to monitor the mood of the people. Government authorities track who is inclined to express discontent, and then work to keep such expression from being forced underground where authorities can neither monitor nor control it. The government tolerates such debates only if they occur in private discussions, closed academic conferences, government-authorized publishing outlets, or other forums where the government does not feel there is any threat of greater public participation that it cannot control. Certain groups and individuals who are unable to obtain government authorization do publish books and periodicals on a small scale, but this is possible only through subterfuge and violation of Olvanan law. These private publishers are, therefore, subject to the threat of closure and arrest.
  
0  Q Fever
+
While Olvana often violently and publicly quells civil unrest, the amount of dissatisfaction has risen dramatically in recent years. The recorded incidents of mass unrest rose form 8,700 twenty years ago to more than 90,000 each in the last three years. Reasons cited include: an aggrieved class of dispossessed migrants and unemployed workers, a deep loss of faith in the Olvanan system, and a weakening in the traditional means of state control. Corruption, state monopolies, the yawning wealth gap, and the rising cost of housing, education, and medical care all contribute significantly to unrest, with property/business seizures and the widening wealth gap as the two top factors. Unemployment, unpaid wages, and police misconduct are additional sources of grievances.
|0  Diarrheal diseases
 
  
0  Hepatitis A
+
=== Criminal Activity ===
 +
Common crime in Olvana includes corruption, drug and human trafficking, money laundering, and fraud. An early focus of the OCP was work to reduce the prevalence of narcotics and gambling and decrease the influence of criminal gangs. These efforts led to a decrease in many violent crimes including larceny, arson, rape, murder, and robbery. However, there was a corresponding increase in economic crimes, including tax evasion, theft of public property, and bribery. Additionally, government officials engaged in improperly taking public property and accepting bribes. Regionally, there are large differences in crime in Olvana, with rural areas reporting lower overall crime rates, but higher violent crimes per capita. Government corruption is similar between urban and rural areas.
  
0  Hepatitis E
+
The relaxation of numerous economic and social restrictions over 40 years ago resulted in a resurgence in certain criminal activities and elements. The youth crime rate skyrocketed from 24.7 to 74.2% of all crime conducted. This surge was, in large part, associated with the return of the Black Societies, a historically significant organized crime element from Olvana. Following the Cheng Revolution, large segments of the Black Societies fled to Olvanese communities around the world. Following Olvana’s recent economic liberalization, the Societies began to re-establish in Olvana, bringing with them crimes associated with narcotics, prostitution, and money laundering.
  
0 Typhoid
+
The majority of human trafficking in Olvana is internal, though it often includes trafficking of individuals from other countries within the region. This domestic trafficking is the most significant human trafficking problem in the country. Criminal elements lure women and children through false promises of legitimate employment into forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation both in Olvana and throughout Asia. Men are smuggled to countries throughout the world for exploitative labor.
  
0 Cholera
+
Olvana also has a high rate of domestic violence, with an estimated thirty percent of Olvanan households experiencing some form of domestic violence. Additional trends in crime include an increase in white-collar crime, closer ties between organized crime and government corruption, and extensive allegations of counterfeiting.
  
0 Malaria
+
==== Cultural Approach to Punishment ====
 +
Olvana believes in swift and punitive punishment. Trials occur rapidly. Olvana still practices capital punishment; it is mostly often employed with murder and drug trafficking convictions. Executions are carried out by lethal injection or shooting. There is widespread public support or capital punishment. Olvana executes more prisoners annually than any other nation, although other nations have much higher rates on a per capita basis. Official Olvanan capital punishment statistics do not include those prisoners put to death for crimes against the state or terrorism.
  
0 Crimean-Congo
+
== Human Rights ==
 +
Despite tremendous economic development since liberalizing its economy, in many ways Olvana remains a developing nation. Its per capita income is still a fraction of advanced countries, and its market reforms are incomplete. There are still substantial regional variations in poverty, infrastructure, and socioeconomic development. Most notably, wages in the Dongguan province are as high as three times that of the overall national average. Inequity also exists in land ownership: 10% of population owns 61.5% of non-state owned land. Olvanans do not conduct typical Western economic expressions of dissatisfaction, such as strikes and boycotts, as the OCP typically responds to these activities by imposing even stricter use of military force. This discourages—but does not eliminate—the possibility of boycotts and picketing. While the country has made some positive developments, including lowering the number of crimes eligible for capital punishment and greater accessibility for students with disabilities, Olvana remains an authoritarian state that systematically curtails a wide range of fundamental human rights, including freedom of expression, association, assembly, and religion.
  
0  Hemorrhagic fever
+
OCP elites view the universal application of human rights as a threat to their power, and decry it as a foreign influence. The government recently passed a wide array of laws regarding state security, cybersecurity, counterterrorism, subversion, and the management of NGOs, conflating criticism with national security. The President’s domestically popular anti-corruption campaign often violates the right to a fair trial, and frequently involves months or years of secret detention. 
  
0 Gonorrhea
+
Olvana faces significant issues with gender equality. Currently, 43.8% of Olvanan women work outside the home. While the OCP theoretically commits to gender equality, the overall lack of respect for human rights means that women continue to face systemic discrimination. The country faces an imbalance of unmarried males, a historically high rate of domestic violence, and sexual harassment in the workplace. Arrests and police harassment have led to the closure of numerous Women’s Rights Centers across Olvana. Laws aimed at reducing domestic violence fall far short of what the international community considers acceptable.
  
0 Chlamydia
+
Although decades of double-digit economic growth lifted more than 600 million people out of poverty, slowing growth rates are adding a sense of urgency to ensuring that the population remains healthy and productive, especially as the economy gradually becomes more service-based. The lower economic growth rate requires reforms in the health sector, as the high growth rates of health expenditure in the past years may be difficult to sustain. Government expenditures on health and long-term care in Olvana will increase three-fold as percent of GDP over the next four decades if adequate reforms are not undertaken. Olvana was a pioneer in primary care, prevention of infectious diseases, and universal insurance coverage; these same programs resulted in a huge decline in mortality and a massive demographic shift towards an older population. Olvana now the challenges associated with a rapidly aging society and the increasing burden of non-communicable diseases, which now account for over 80 percent of annual deaths. Also contributing to this trend are unhealthy behaviors such as smoking, poor diets, sedentary lifestyles, and alcohol consumption, as well as environmental factors such as air pollution and traffic safety.
  
0 Tuberculosis
+
Freedom House gives Olvana one of the worse Global Freedom Score with a total score of only 12 out of a possible 100 points. This is a score of 11 in civil liberties and only a single point in political rights. With only one political party allowed in the country, almost all political rights of the people are repressed. Civil liberties are not much better. The Olvana government uses facial recognition software extensively to locate criminals and those that fight against the regime. The Olvanan people cannot refuse to be photographed for the facial recognition data base and the government is well on their way to putting its entire population into the electronic system.
  
0 Leptospirosis
+
== Demographic Statistics Chart ==
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
|'''Social Statistic'''
 +
| colspan="3" |'''Country X'''
 +
|-
 +
|Primary  Languages (%)
 +
| colspan="3" |Olvan-Mandarin  70%
  
0 Hantavirus
+
Non-Mandarin  Olvan: 22%
  
0  Hemorrhagic fever
+
Non-Olvanese languages: 7%
 
 
0 Anthrax
 
 
 
0 Rabies
 
|0  Diarrheal diseases
 
 
 
0 Typhoid
 
 
 
0  Hepatitis A
 
 
 
0 Cholera
 
 
 
0 Salmonella
 
 
 
0 Tuberculosis
 
 
 
0 HIV/AIDS
 
 
 
0 Encephalitis
 
 
 
0  H5N1 avian influenza
 
|0  Diarrheal diseases
 
 
 
0 Typhoid
 
 
 
0  Hepatitis A
 
 
 
0 Malaria
 
 
 
0  West Nile Fever
 
 
 
0 Crimean-Congo
 
 
 
0  Hemorrhagic fever
 
 
 
0 Meningococcal
 
 
 
0 Meningitis
 
 
 
0 Gonorrhea
 
 
 
0 Syphilis
 
 
 
0  Hantaviral fevers
 
 
 
0 Leptospirosis
 
 
 
0 Rabies
 
|0  Diarrheal diseases
 
 
 
0 Typhoid
 
 
 
0  Hepatitis A
 
 
 
0  West Nile fever
 
 
 
0 Crimean-Congo
 
 
 
0 Hemorrhagic fever
 
 
 
0 Meningococcal
 
 
 
0 Meningitis
 
 
 
0 Tuberculosis
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Ethnic groups (%)'''
+
|Ethnic Groups (%)
|Persian: 51.0
+
| colspan="3" |Olvan: 90%
 
 
Atropian: 24.0
 
 
 
Gilaki or
 
 
 
Mazandarani: 8.0
 
 
 
Kurd:  7.0
 
 
 
Arab: 3.0
 
 
 
Lur: 2.0
 
 
 
Baluch: 2.0
 
 
 
Turkmen: 2.0
 
 
 
Other: 1.0
 
|Atropian: 90.6
 
 
 
Gilani: 2.2
 
 
 
Arianian: 3.0
 
 
 
Donovian: 1.8
 
  
Limarian1.5
+
Zhuang2.0%
  
Other 0.9
+
Hui: 2.0%
|Arab: 70.0
 
  
Gorgan: 5.0
+
Kam  (Dong): <1.0%
  
Atropian: 5.0
+
Miao  (Hmong): <1.0%
  
Limarian: 10.0
+
Kinh  (Vietnamese): <1.0%
  
Other: 10.0
+
Muong  <0.5%
|Gorgan: 83.8
 
  
Atropian: 6.5
+
Thai  (Dai): <0.5%
  
Limarian: 5.7
+
Hani:  <0.5%
  
Donovian: 1.5
+
Bai: <0.5%
  
Other: 2.5
+
Tibetan: <0.5%
|Limarian: 97.9
 
  
Yezidi (Kurd): 1.3
+
Yi: <0.5%
  
Donovian: '''''0.5'''''
+
Dongxiang: <0.3%
  
Other: 0.3
+
Other: <.3%
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Religions in'''
+
|Major  Religions (%)
 
+
| colspan="3" |Unaffiliated: 25.2%
'''OE (%)'''
 
|Shia Muslim: 89.0
 
 
 
Sunni Muslim: 9.0
 
 
 
Other: 2.0
 
|Muslim: 93.4
 
 
 
Donovian Orthodox: 2.5
 
  
Limarian Orthodox: 2.3
+
Hinduism: 34%
  
Other: 1.8
+
Olvan  Folk Religion: 32%
|Sunni Hanafi Muslim: 80.0
 
  
Shia Sufi Muslim: 5.0
+
Islam: 2.5% (primarily in the west)
  
National Orthodox Christian: 15.0
+
Christian: 2.3%
|Orthodox Christian: 83.9
 
  
Muslim: 9.9
+
Buddhist: 1.0%
  
Limarian-Gregorian: 3.9
+
Misc.  Indigenous Folk Religions: <1.0%
  
Catholic: 0.8
+
Kinh  Folk Religion: <1.0%
  
Other: 0.8
+
Other: <1.0%
 
 
None: 0.7
 
|Limarian Orthodox: 94.7
 
 
 
Other Christian: 4.0
 
 
 
Yezidi: 1.3
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Languages'''
+
|Literacy  Rate (Older Than 15 in %)
|Persian Dialects: 58.0
+
| colspan="3" |Overall: 96.4%
 
 
Turkic Dialects: 26.0
 
 
 
Kurdish: 9.0
 
 
 
Luri: 2.0
 
 
 
Baluchi: 1.0
 
 
 
Arabic: 1.0
 
 
 
Kalarian: 1.0
 
 
 
Other: 2.0
 
|Atropian (official): 90.3
 
 
 
Lezgi: 2.2
 
 
 
Donovian: 1.8
 
 
 
Limarian: 1.5
 
 
 
Other: 3.3
 
 
 
Unspecified: 1.0
 
|Donovian (official)
 
 
 
Many minority
 
 
 
languages
 
|Gorgan: 71.0
 
 
 
Donovian: 9.0
 
 
 
Limarian: 7.0
 
 
 
Atropian: 6.0
 
 
 
Other: 7.0
 
|Limarian: 97.7
 
 
 
Yezidi: 1.0
 
  
Donovian: 0.9
+
Male: 98.3%
  
Other: 0.4
+
Female: 94.4%
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Literacy'''
+
|Age  Distribution (%)
 
+
|Age
'''rate (older'''
 
 
 
'''than 15)'''
 
 
 
'''(%)'''
 
|Total: 77.0
 
 
 
Male: 83.5
 
 
 
Female: 70.4
 
|Total: 98.8
 
 
 
Male: 99.5
 
 
 
Female: 98.2
 
|Total: 98.0
 
 
 
Male: 98.0
 
 
 
Female: 98.0
 
|Total: 100
 
 
 
Male: 100
 
 
 
Female: 100
 
|Total: 99.4
 
  
Male: 99.7
+
0-14
  
Female: 99.2
+
15-24
|}
 
  
== Population Movement (Migration/IDPs/Refugees) ==
+
25-54
Internal migration in Olvana is one of the most extensive in the world. Over the last forty years, the urban population has grown 242%, three-fourths of which was attributable to net migration and urban reclassification—the largest such volume of urban migration in history. This has led to concerns about a brain drain, as professionals and intellectuals are most likely to obtain permanent employment and not return to the rural communities. Migrant workers account for 36% of the total workforce in Olvana. Two-thirds of these workers are male. Current government estimates indicate that within the next ten years, this number will grow to 40% of the urban population.  In general, while urbanization provides Olvanese workers with more opportunity, it also constrains them, since the government excludes rural-urban migrant workers from local educational resources, citywide social welfare programs and many jobs. Additionally, potential employers view migrant workers—especially females—as replaceable labor, and generally offer much lower wages. Furthermore, the government will forcibly move migrant workers out of the coastal urban areas and into the rural interior based on agricultural labor needs, irrespective of the migrant workers’ origins.
 
  
Waves of Olvanese emigration occurred from the 19<sup>th</sup> century through the mid-20th century, mainly due to wars and starvation, invasion from various foreign countries, and problems resulting from political corruption. Most immigrants were illiterate peasants and manual laborers who emigrated to the Americas, southern Africa, and other parts of Asia. After the Communist revolution, strict controls prevented large numbers of people from leaving the country. Liberalized emigration policies enacted in the 1980s, however, facilitated the legal departure of increasing numbers of Olvanese, who joined their overseas relatives. Additionally, a modernization program allowed Olvanese students and scholars—especially engineers—to attend foreign education and research institutions, bringing increased contact with industrialized nations.  Relatively small levels of immigration came as the result of government-offered various incentives intended to to repatriate part of the Olvanese diaspora. The government settled many of those retuning on various islands in the South China Sea.
+
55-64
  
Over the last decade, Olvana has accepted over 300,000 refugees from Africa and Asia displaced due to natural disasters, famine, disease outbreak, and war. The term refugee, however, is not used by the Olvanese government. Instead, their official position is that these migrants were accepted as part of a work program sponsorship; these indivuals are expected to return to their homeland.
+
65+
 +
|Male
  
== Population Distribution ==
+
17.39
Ariana now is predominantly an urban society. Since 1970, one in four Arianians have moved from rural homes to urban areas in search of higher-paying jobs and a better life. In 1970, only 42% of the population lived in urban areas. At present, 68% lived in cities and this percentage increases at a rate of 2.1% per year. Analysts project the current urbanization rates to continue. The concentration of urban dwellers allows the Arianian government to easily send messages to the population but it also concentrates more people in one area who could riot if they become disenchanted with the government.
 
  
Most major Arianian cities are growing rapidly—in some instances even more rapidly than Tehran. Key urban centers include Tehran, Mashhad, Isfahan, Karaj, and Tabriz. This continued migration will allow for better quality of life if jobs remain available and resources are not overloaded. Conversely, this migration could result in increased poverty for those who do not have the necessary job skills and, as a result, are not able to provide for their families.
+
11.48
  
== Demographic Mix ==
+
46.80
Approximately 40.1 million Arianian citizens are of military age (16-49 years old)—20,763,890 males and 20,157,570 females, or about 62% of the total population. Of these, about 35 million meet the fitness standards for military service. Over 1.2 million Arianian males and females reach  the military significant age annually. The maximum Arianian military male capacity is about 6.6 million soldiers, sailors, and airmen. Ariana’s population reveals a youthful demographic, with half of its citizens at or below the age of 26.3, compared to the US with a median age of 36.7 years. Pakistan’s median age of 22.6 years, Iraq’s 21.5 years, and Afghanistan’s 18.1 years, however, demonstrate that Ariana’s neighbors exhibit an even younger populace. The average Arianian female outlives the average male by about three years. This relatively young population provides significant human resources for both military and civilian jobs.
 
  
== Social Volatility ==
+
12.08
Ariana currently demonstrates high social volatility with open civil unrest, the rise of a political reform movement, and changes to its basic social fabric, such as the role of women in society. Political unrest after the June 2009 presidential election sparked demonstrations across Ariana and drew international attention. These massive street protests highlighted Arianians' disapproval of their ruling regime and desire for a more transparent and inclusive political system. Protests continued into the subsequent Arianian holidays. Current observations demonstrate that Ariana's opposition movement remains active and Tehran’s grip on power may exhibit some vulnerability. Though the Arianian military recently publicly expressed some dissatisfaction with the current president, the theocracy will remain in control as long as it maintains the military’s support.
 
  
Long-simmering tensions continue between ethnic and religious groups, including tensions between the Shia and the non-Shia groups such as Ariana’s Sunni Arabs, Baluchi separatists, and Kurds. Reportedly, Shia morality police and government police targeted Baha’is, Christians, and Assyrians nationwide, as well as Tehran’s Jewish population. The Arianian government likely will not take action to eliminate the discrimination against the country’s minority and Christian sects.
+
12.34
 +
|Female
  
Several foreign anti-Ariana insurgent groups operate with sporadic violence and have attacked current government entities and key leaders. The largest group is located in the southeast of Ariana and has been opposing Ariana for two decades through a low-level pseudo-insurgency. The group God’s Helpers Brigade foments violent opposition by the populace to state taxation policies; unreliable electric, sewage, and potable water services; substandard preventive medical services; and a state judicial system that illegally favors the political party currently in control of  the government’s executive and legislative branches.
+
16.79
  
Other groups and affiliates located throughout Ariana are sympathetic to pro-Western economic initiatives and social-political concepts. (''See the Military variable for more information.'')
+
11.29
  
== Education Level ==
+
45.70
Education remains widely accessible, as most Arianians attend primary and secondary schools. Seventy-seven percent of adults possess basic literacy skills while over 80% complete high school. Annually, over one million high school graduates apply for entrance into the nation’s universities.
 
  
The Arianian primary school system consists of five years of school that most students begin at age six. Middle school is three years and high school, four years. High school academics include science, mathematics, and vocational or technical skills. High school graduates must score well on a mandatory university entrance exam to attend any public Arianian university.
+
12.02
  
After the Council of Guardians Revolution, the primary and secondary educational system emphasized the Koran and selected religious studies. Although government clerics attempted to infuse Islamic teachings into the primary through secondary curricula, some intellectuals resisted these efforts at the university level. To counter this opposition, the government’s clerical leadership rewards supporters with university teaching appointments and denies appointments to those with suspect ideological convictions. In 2009, clerics reportedly redoubled their efforts to root out  “Western influences” from their education system. In November 2009, to quell student protests, the government announced the possibility of the placement of clerics in every school. Local seminaries also expanded their influence over the curriculum of nearby schools. The Arianian government’s education policies will continue to drive those who want an open education from the field and, if given the chance, many will leave the country to teach elsewhere.
+
14.20
 
 
== Ethnic Diversity ==
 
The Persian ethnic group dominates Arianian culture, society, and government. Ariana’s diverse ethnic mix includes Persians, Atropians, Gilakis or Mazandaranis, Kurds, Arabs, Baluchis, and   other smaller groups. Despite the ethnic diversity, there remains a strong sense of Arianian national identity. The Persian-run government has successfully maintained the peace between its ethnic minorities, but at times did so with a firm hand. Demonstrations by Arianian Sunni Arab (most Arianian Arabs are Shia) and Sunni Kurd opposition groups have grown violent in the past, which forced the Arianian government to respond in kind. At times, overlapping identities within Ariana have posed political challenges to the regime, but none currently show signs that they will directly challenge the government’s authority.
 
 
 
== Religious Diversity ==
 
In contrast to its level of ethnic diversity, Ariana is relatively homogenous in terms of religion. The religious diversity that does exist is highly correlated with ethnicity: Ariana’s largest non-Shia bloc— Sunni Muslims—is mainly drawn from Ariana’s Kurdish, Baluchi, and Turkmen populations. The majority of the population is Muslim (98%); of this group 89% are Shia and 9% are Sunni (mostly Turkmen, Arabs, Baluchis, Kurds, and Khuzistani Arabs). Non-Muslims account for 2% of the population. There are no official statistics available on the size of the Sufi Muslim population; however, some reports estimate between 2.5% and 6.4% of the Arianian population practice Sufism. Regardless, Ariana’s stringent imposition of religious ideals and education on society does not allow for much diversity or any degree of separation of religion from other aspects of society.
 
 
 
== Common Languages ==
 
Ariana’s principal language is Persian (Farsi), which is the primary language for about 58% of the population. Arianians view the ability to communicate in the Persian language—also the country’s official language—as a standard of civility and social distinction, separating the lower classes from the elites. In the remaining population, 26% speak Turkic, 9% Kurdish, 2% Luri, 1% Baluchi, 1% Arabic, 1% Kalarian, and 2% speak other languages. For US personnel to communicate with the Arianian populace, they will need to speak Farsi or use local interpreters.
 
 
 
== Criminal Activity ==
 
Many years ago, the US State Department issued a warning to US persons against travel to Ariana that remains in effect due to high criminal activity present throughout the entire country. “US citizens who travel to Ariana despite the Travel Warning should exercise caution throughout the country, but especially in the southeastern region where Westerners have been victims of criminal gangs often involved in the smuggling of drugs and other contraband.”
 
 
 
Crime exists in many forms throughout Ariana. In 2000, the Arianian government reported that Tehran contained up to two million drug addicts, who consumed up to five tons of narcotics daily. Drug use and prostitution are widespread among young Arianians. Petty street crimes—such as robberies by men in unmarked cars and on motorcycles—also commonly occur across Ariana. Some victims have reported robberies by police impersonators in civilian clothing. Terrorist explosions have killed a number of people in Ariana since 2005. The Arianian government has blamed the US, UK, and Saudi governments (or their alleged proxies) for involvement in bombings directed against Arianian military forces.
 
 
 
While Ariana does not publish national crime statistics, the Arianian news media and organizations such as the UN report major incidents of criminal activity and public executions. In 2010, the UN reported Ariana executed the most criminals per capita of any nation. Ariana executed 320 persons, including seven juveniles. About 130 juvenile offenders remain on death row. Between January and May 2011, Ariana executed approximately 90 convicted criminals for capital crimes.
 
 
 
The Arianian government considers most violent crimes—to include murder, robbery, rape, and drug distribution—as capital offenses punishable by hanging. Judges, however, continue to issue disparate sentences such as stoning and throwing from heights for capital offenses. Arianian judges also regularly order executions for adultery and for premarital sex, despite UN requests to end such practices. Judicial officials often discriminate between the sexes, and sentences of stoning to death for adultery are disproportionately handed down to women.
 
[[File:Smuggling Tunnel on Arianian and Atropian Border.png|thumb|Smuggling Tunnel on Arianian and Atropian Border]]
 
Narcotics and human trafficking are major criminal enterprises in Ariana. Ariana remains a destination country and a global drug transit point for narcotics from Afghanistan. Opium, heroin, morphine, and hashish are trafficked into Arianian border towns from routes through Baluchistan, Nimruz, Farah, and Herat. Criminal elements also utilize century’s old ratlines on the borders to conduct smuggling operations that also include  recently developed underground tunnels to negate law enforcement detection. These under- ground networks range from small and crude to very elaborate with electricity. The exact number of tunnels is unknown at this time; however, STRATCOM estimates that 20 to 30 tunnels are active  within the Northern border regions  of Ariana. The picture is a recent smuggling tunnel discovered by Atropian border guards. Criminal networks traffic Arianian women to Europe, Central/South Asia, and the Persian Gulf states for labor and sexual exploitation. Ariana remains a significant destination country for boys from Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh for labor.
 
 
 
== Human Rights ==
 
Ariana’s government possesses a spotty human rights record that appears to be deteriorating due to hard-line Islamic leadership. If US personnel work in Ariana, they may find themselves advocating for human rights in accordance with values articulated by the UN. Reports over the past few years recount numerous severe abuses. Recently reported human rights violations include:
 
* Unjust executions after reportedly unfair trials
 
* Disappearances
 
* Torture and severe officially-sanctioned punishments such as death by stoning or flogging
 
* Excessive use of force against student demonstrators
 
* Poor prison conditions
 
* Arbitrary arrest and detention
 
* Lack of judicial independence
 
* Lack of fair public trials
 
* Political prisoners and detainees held without charges or held on false charges
 
* Restrictions of civil liberties, such as speech, press, assembly, association, movement, and privacy
 
* Severe restrictions on freedom of religion
 
* Official corruption
 
* Lack of government transparency
 
* Violence and legal and societal discrimination against women, minorities, and homosexuals
 
* Trafficking of persons
 
* Incitement to anti-Semitism
 
* Restriction of workers' rights, such as freedom of association, organizing, and collective bargaining
 
* Child labor, including forced child labor
 
* Persecution of minorities, including religious minorities
 
Arianian women continue to face widespread discrimination in law and practice, despite President Moudin's claims that Arianian women are the “freest in the world.” Gender inequality is widespread and sustained by Arianian law. For example, unless her ex-husband is a drug addict or in prison, a divorced woman must surrender to her ex-husband custody of her sons when they reach two years of age, and of her daughters when they reach seven.
 
Women suffer discrimination under property law as well. For example, when a father dies and leaves an inheritance, the daughter only receives half of what her brother receives. These aspects of Arianian society are unlikely to change as they are based on widely held religious beliefs.
 
 
 
== Centers of Social Power ==
 
The family (immediate and extended) is a basic foundation of Ariana’s social structure. This family focus shapes people’s identity, stature, and ambition. Arianians place dedication to their family  above other social priorities, to include business endeavors and personal relationships. Arianians condone favoritism or bias based on family relationships, and this remains a culturally accepted norm. Multiple family members often work within the same organization; Arianians rationalize the nepotism, portraying it as a means to employ reliable and trustworthy individuals. They rely heavily on the family unit for emotional support. Arianians demonstrate intimacy in their relationships with their extended family and tend to care for elderly relatives at home. The immediate family in Ariana averages less than two children per household.
 
 
 
Factors such as an individual’s age, origin, education level, wealth, and gender contribute to an Arianian’s social rank. Social class and family background determine status more than an individual’s character or achievement. Arianian culture exhibits a hierarchy in its structure. Elaborate rituals of courtesy and respect permeate Arianian culture and affect a wide variety of social norms. These customs determine where a person sits at a table, and even how individuals  greet each other.
 
 
 
Individuals deemed inferior within particular relationships must act subservient and respectful in their interactions with their social superiors. The superior remunerates the subordinate’s gestures with acts of charity and generosity. Although Arianian society accepts such interaction as necessary, it amounts to little more than a farce in many cases. In reality, both parties typically distrust each other and may be suspicions of the other’s motives. This veneer operates across most Arianian social institutions, including the military.
 
 
 
=== Tribal System ===
 
* Sheikhs can (but may not always be) influential and powerful.
 
* A Sheikh can have family members (and therefore influence) spread over large geographic areas, and may not have any real power or influence in his immediate area.
 
* Tribal organization is as follows:
 
** Ÿ  Tribal Confederation
 
** Ÿ  Tribe
 
** Ÿ  Sub-tribe
 
** Ÿ  Clan
 
** Ÿ  Branch
 
** Ÿ  Family
 
 
 
=== Honor and Shame ===
 
* Honor in Arianian culture defines an individual’s reputation and worth.
 
* A family’s male head of household is responsible for protecting the family’s honor.
 
* When someone’s honor is compromised, Arianians seek revenge for themselves, their family, or their group.
 
 
 
== Basic Cultural Norms and Values ==
 
Over the last 25 centuries, the people who inhabited present-day Ariana have shown a long history  of conflict. From the ancient Persian dynasties to the Islamic expansion and the conflicts of the 20th Century, war has been a part of most of Ariana’s history. From its founding in 610, Islam expanded quite often by conquest, and it was no different in Ariana.
 
 
 
After World War II until the Council of Guardians Revolution, the US provided much military support to Ariana and made it the best military force in the region. After the Council of Guardians Revolution, Western-supplied equipment often fell into disrepair due to a lack of maintenance and spare parts. Due to a firm belief in the righteousness of their religion, young Arianian males will continue to participate enthusiastically in the military despite any leadership deficiencies.
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
|'''Meeting & Greeting'''
 
|The lower-status person issues the first greeting—typically ''Salam'' (peace). Men shake hands.
 
 
 
Men do not shake hands with a  woman unless the woman offers her hand first. Make a slight bow or nod of the head when shaking hands.
 
 
 
People of the same gender may kiss  on the cheek.
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Visiting/ Hospitality'''
+
|Median  Age
|Stand when an older or important person enters or leaves a room. Shaking a child’s hand shows respect for the parents.
+
| colspan="3" |Overall:  37.4
  
Due to the lack of other entertainment, family visitation is the most common form  of recreation. Honored guests are placed at the head of the table/room and are served first.
+
Males: 36.5
  
It is acceptable to decline the honor and pass it on to someone else.
+
Females:  38.4
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Manners'''
+
|Population
|Use  Mr. or Mrs. until well acquainted with the person.
+
| colspan="3" |1,123,348,142
 
 
If someone displays interest in  your meal, offer them a portion of it. It is alright to decline the offer of  the food from their plate.
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Customs and Practices Cultural Dos & Don’ts'''
+
|Annual  Growth Rate
|No casinos, nightclubs, dance  halls, movies with nudity or sexual themes, or music genres such as rap or  rock.
+
| colspan="3" |0.59%
 
 
Men and women dress conservatively, with men wearing  Western-style clothing.
 
 
 
Women must be covered from head to  toe in public. Some women will wear a burqa, covering all but the eyes, while  others will wear a head scarf that exposes the face.
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Gifts'''
+
|Birth  Rate Per 1,000 People
|Be careful about praising a person’s possession as he will  likely offer it to you. Bring a small gift when invited to a household. It  will not be opened in front of you. People who return from trips are expected  to bring gifts for family and friends.
+
| colspan="3" |16.5
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Taboos'''
+
|Death  Rate Per 1,000 People
|No chess or card games allowed.
+
| colspan="3" |12.2
 
 
Girls  can only play sports in special enclosed areas. Women cannot perform music in  public.
 
 
 
Do not eat or drink in public from sunrise to sunset during  Ramadan.
 
 
 
Do not find yourself in a closed  room alone with a member of the opposite gender. Do not consume any alcohol.
 
 
 
Do not cross your legs or point  the soles of your feet at anyone. Do not eat with the left hand.
 
 
 
Do not over-praise a child as the  parents will think you are putting the “evil eye” on them. Do not stare at  others. This is considered rude and is offensive if done to a female by a  male.
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Personal Space'''
+
|Urban  Population (%)
|Much less than that of the US.
+
| colspan="3" |87.0%
 
 
Arianians will stand very close  when speaking to a person.
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Displays of Affection'''
+
|Annual  Urbanization Rate
|No public displays of affection even between married people.
+
| colspan="3" |0.7%
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Marriage Rituals'''
+
|Infant Mortality Rate Per 1000 Live Births
|Dating  is uncommon.
+
| colspan="3" |12.2
 
 
Parents choose the bride for their son through the ''Khastagari'' or investigation process.
 
 
 
A contract is concluded at the  second ''Khastagari'', which is when  the groom meets the bride for the first time.
 
 
 
The groom’s  family gives a gift to the bride at the ''Bale  Barun'' ceremony months later.
 
 
 
The two families determine the ''Majles'' (dowry), hold a ''Namzadi'' where the bride and groom exchange rings, and set the wedding date.
 
 
 
In the ''Khunche,'' the  groom’s family takes gifts to the bride’s house in flat containers carried on  their heads. Ceremony takes place at a ''Sofeye  Aghd'' (Wedding Spread) where the marriage is a contract.
 
 
 
The ''Patakhti'' (similar  to a US wedding shower) takes place after the wedding.
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Work Week/ Work Hours'''
+
|Life  Expectancy At Birth (Years)
|Saturday to Thursday, 44 hours per week with a Friday-only weekend.
+
| colspan="3" |Overall:  72.6
|-
 
|'''Concept Of Time'''
 
|More relaxed than the West.
 
  
Arianians want to establish trust before working with a foreigner or stranger.
+
Male: 70.5
|-
 
|'''Dispute Resolution'''
 
|Often hold grudges and seek  revenge.
 
|-
 
|'''Birth Rituals'''
 
|Only  close relatives visit the mother in the hospital.
 
  
Others wait until the baby comes home and then bring a gift when they visit. An older member of the family  will speak Arabic into the baby’s ear.
+
Female: 76.0
 
 
Maternal grandmother usually takes care of the mother and  child for 10 days.
 
 
 
Mothers are expected to breast-feed their babies because of a  fear that if they do not, the child will become “remorseless.”
 
 
 
Some brides eat a cooked sheep’s neck to give the baby a  strong neck. Baby receives a special bath at 10 days old.
 
 
 
When the first  tooth appears, the Mother feeds the baby “tooth soup.”
 
 
 
Some Shia males are circumcised on  the seventh day after their birth, but all Muslim males are circumcised  before puberty.
 
 
 
Children from any marriage belong to the father in the event  of a divorce.
 
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Death Rituals'''
+
|Major  Diseases In OE
|Bodies must be buried within 24 hours.
+
| colspan="3" |Bacterial diarrhea
 
 
Washed nine times (often three now) with ''sedr, kafoor'', and fresh water by the same gender. Body openings plugged with cotton balls.
 
  
Body wrapped in a ''kafan'' (large white cotton  cloth), tied on both ends, and placed in the coffin. Sometimes females will not attend male relative’s funeral.
+
Hepatitis A
  
Buried individually, but high plot cost means that some Arianians use the same plot. Buried with right side facing Mecca.
+
Typhoid  Fever
 
 
Burials take place only in daylight hours. Professional readers or recordings recite prayers.
 
 
 
Family will dress in black for 40 days while some extend the mourning period to one year.
 
 
 
Relatives visit the gravesite on the ''Hafteh'' (seventh day), ''Cheleh'' (40th day), and ''Sal'' (one year) after the person’s death.
 
 
|}
 
|}
 
+
[[Category:DATE]]
== Summary ==
+
[[Category:Pacific|Pacific]]
Ariana’s society has continued to evolve, despite the abuses condoned by a theocratic government that is mismanaged by powerful Shia clerics. While Ariana’s citizens enjoy a higher standard of living than some of their regional neighbors, Arianians are frustrated with the persistent high inflation and unemployment rates. Young adults must overcome economic obstacles before marrying and starting a family of their own. The rural poor still do not enjoy the improvements in their standard of living that Arianian leaders promised during the last two national elections campaigns. Many professionals leave Ariana to seek better opportunities abroad. All of these issues continue to perplex the religious establishment, which has not developed viable solutions.
+
[[Category:Olvana]]
[[Category:DATE|040]]
 
[[Category:Caucasus]]
 
[[Category:Ariana]]
 
 
[[Category:Social]]
 
[[Category:Social]]

Latest revision as of 16:00, 4 March 2021

DATE Pacific > Olvana > Social: Olvana ←You are here

Contents

Social Overview

Olvanan culture spans more than 4,500 years. Olvana is notable for its religious diversity, with Hinduism, Traditional Folk Religions, Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity among the nation’s major religions. For much of the country’s history, families could obtain social advancement by high performance in the prestigious imperial examinations, and a culture of merit remains greatly valued in Olvana today. Some observers see the period following the establishment of the People's Republic of Olvana as a continuation of traditional Olvanese dynastic history, while others claim that the Communist Party's rule damaged the foundations of Olvanan culture, thanks to political movements that destroyed many aspects of traditional culture. Today, the Olvanan Communist Party (OCP) seeks to change some traditional aspects such as rural land tenure, sexism, and the Confucian system of education, while preserving others, such as the family structure and culture of obedience to the state as being integral to society.

Brief History

After three millennia of imperial dynastic rule, the Republic of Olvana was declared in 1912 and consolidated over the next two decades. While there was no longer a royal family, much of the Olvanan culture continued just as before the republic. Internal battles often occurred over the next two decades. 

In 1950, the Olvanan Civil War began with the support of the world major communist powers. On 1 November 1951, the People’s Republic of Olvana (PRO) was declared by Olvanan Communist Party (OCP) Chairman Cheng Ze, establishing the present-day political body that rules Olvana. Cheng was an enthusiastic communist and began immediately to remodel the Olvanan government and economy based on the Donovian model. 

Many of the reforms Cheng tried to initiate actually hurt the poorest of the Olvanese population. It was only after Cheng’s death and modern reforms began that the lives of the Olvanese common people began to improve. The improvements were gradual, but most of the Olvanese are better off now there a half-century ago. Still, the culture underlying most of the people is based on traditions that date back centuries, if not longer. 

Demographics

Languages

Primary language in Olvana by region (Placeholder)

The official spoken language in Olvana is Mandarin-Olvanese, based on the Shanghai dialect of Eastern Olvana. Efforts to make Mandarin-Olvanese the official national language were met with opposition from minority populations. While the majority of the ethnic Olvan group population speaks Mandarin-Olvanese as their primary language, there are pockets of ethnic Olvans who speak other dialects of Olvanese. The Olvan population in the southeastern portion of Olvana speak a variety of regionally based Olvanese dialects. This has resulted in the establishment of regional and provincial “official” languages, including other Olvanese dialects such as Wu, Min, Yue, Xiang, Gan and Hakka. Non-Olvanese languages spoken widely by ethnic minorities include other Sino-Tibetic languages, some from the Lolo-Burmese family of languages, Hmongic Languages, a variety of Tai-Kadai languages, and Vietnamese. English is used as the second official language, used for many administrative, business, and higher education purposes. There are 292 living languages in Olvana, with over 1,652 dialects. Most of these are mutually unintelligible, even within dialect groups. Social groups are generally classified based on linguistic differences and, in some cases, variations in dialect are so large that subcultures speaking variations of the same language cannot communicate with each other in their mother tongues.

Ethnicities

Primary ethnic groups in Olvana (Placeholder)

Olvana has more than two thousand unique ethnic groups and subcultures, and representation from every major religion. Only the continent of Africa exceeds the linguistic, genetic, and cultural diversity of the nation of Olvana. In Olvana, the cultural difference between adjacent provinces—or even within the same province—is often as big as that between adjacent European nations.

The OCP officially recognizes 56 distinct ethnic groups within the PRO. The largest of these are the Olvan, which comprises about 91.51% of the total population. Within the Olvan ethnicity, there are numerous subcultures that stem largely from the uneven intermingling of two divergent and heterogeneous populations: the Ancestral North Olvanese and Ancestral South Olvanese. The world’s largest single ethnic group, the Olvan outnumber all of the ethnic minorities within Olvana combined. Olvana’s 55 minority ethnic groups account for about 8.49% of the population. However, the latest national census reported that while the Olvan population increased by 5.74%, the population of the 55 national minorities combined increased by 6.92%. Some minority groups are widely dispersed in small concentrations across Olvana, while others are heavily concentrated in regions or even single provinces.

During the Olvanese dynastic era divided the Olvanese population into a caste system, a practice dating to at least 221 BCE. The list of scheduled castes stemmed from an original classification of landlord, peasant, artisan, and merchant. Theoretically, except for the position of the Emperor, nothing was hereditary. Elimination of these class divisions was a root cause of the Olvanan Civil War following World War II. However, despite official claims that the caste system is gone and numerous laws that theoretically prevent class discrimination, the social stratification related to the caste system is still present throughout much of Olvan society, particularly in Hindu majority areas.  That said, continued urbanization and affirmative action programs are leading to a decline in discriminatory practices.

While innumerable tensions and conflicts between the ethnic Olvans and minority groups were common throughout Olvana's history, today many of the minority communities have either been integrated or assimilated into Olvan society. That said, attempts to preserve minority cultures and languages have been successful. Those minority groups who have rejected Olvan efforts of acculturation often find themselves at an economic disadvantage. Though it is not part of any official policy, many Olvan people have migrated from Olvan majority areas into regions with larger minority populations. This has resulted in a demographic shift, and increased acculturation simply due to the fact that the minority population is exposed to more Olvan influence.

The following table lists some of the larger minority ethnicities found within Olvana:

Bai Kam (Dong) Muong Thai
Dongxiang Kinh (Vietnamese) Nùng Tibetan
Hani Li Nùng Yi
Hui Miao (Hmung/Mong) Tày Zhuang

Religions

Olvana Religions (Placeholder)

A diversity of religious beliefs and practices combined with a predominant Hindu majority characterizes religion in Olvana. Olvana is a secular state in accordance with the Constitution and the government of Olvana is officially atheist. However, religion plays a central and definitive role in the daily life of the population. While the Constitution theoretically guarantees freedom of religion, religious organizations that lack official approval can be subject to state persecution. The State Administration for Religious Affairs oversees religious affairs and issues in the country and frequently takes a very biased pro-Hindu stance, reflecting the religious makeup of the country.

Religious Distribution in Olvana (Placeholder)

The OCP officially banned religion following the revolution, both as a standard Communist precept and as part of the effort to remove the Hindu-based caste system. Initially, there was widespread suppression and persecution of religious leaders. Over time, the Party recognized the unlikelihood of the people abandoning Hinduism altogether and have slowly become more tolerant of religious activities. However, it continues to use its officially atheistic status to suppress non-Hindus in certain provinces.

Excluding party officials, whom the government bans from belonging to a religious organization, 74.8% of Olvanans are religious, while roughly 25.2% of Olvanans are unaffiliated. Atheism and agnostics have visible influence in Olvana, often taking a Confucian bent, along with a self-ascribed tolerance to other faiths. Nationally, the Olvanan religious population comprises 34% Hindus, 32% Olvan Folk Religion, 2.5% Muslims, 2.3% Christians, , 1.0% Buddhists, Less than 2.0% of the population practices some form of indigenous ethnically folk religion, with the Kinh Folk Religion found near Hanoi being the largest. Hinduism and the Olvan Folk Religion are the predominant belief systems within Olvana. Both faiths are closely linked to the Olvan identity.

The vast majority of Olvanans engage in religious rituals on a daily basis whether they are actually religious or not. While many Olvanans are not adherents to any particular faith, many religious practices have become highly engrained throughout their community and personal life. These rituals, however, are widely diverse specific not only their belief system, but also region, village, and individual.

Historically, conflict has stemmed from the competing ideologies of Hindu nationalism and Olvan Folk Traditions. Additional faith based friction can be seen in the relationship between the government’s stance of secularism and the Muslim minority in the northwest, and the regional suppression of Buddhism and Christianity. One of the major contributing factors to religious conflicts in Olvana was a previous lack of education among the masses and the ease with which corrupt politicians could take advantage of the same. Even though freedom of religion is an integral part of the Olvanan constitution, the inability to hold communal mobs accountable has accentuated the occasional religious conflicts.

Education

Education is considered extremely important in Olvana by both the government and by families. For most families in the middle class and above, there is pressure to do well academically in school. Families will often sacrifice to obtain a good education for their child.

Literacy Rate

The official overall literacy rate as declared by the PRO government is 96.4%. This is 98.3% for males and 94.4% for females.

Educational System

Compulsory education in Olvana is comprised of primary and junior secondary schools, which together cover the nine years between the ages of 6 and 15. The government pledges to provide this education completely free, including textbooks and fees. However, while annual education investment has increased fivefold over the past decade, there remains an inequality in education spending. Annual education expenditure per secondary school student in the capital totals $3,395, while the poorest provinces spend only $543 per student. There are 311,588 primary schools, 73,948 secondary schools, and 1,756 higher education institutions in Olvana. In 1949, only 20% of the population could read, compared to 94% today. Within the last decade, Olvanan students achieved the world's best results in mathematics, science, and literacy, as tested in a worldwide evaluation of 15-year-old school pupils' scholastic performance.

Educational Attainment

Despite the impressive results in literacy improvement since 1950, Olvanan education faces both native and international criticism for its emphasis on rote memorization and its gap in quality from rural to urban areas. Although the rural-urban literacy gap has dropped from 21.2% to 16.1% over the last decade, the difference between most literate province (93.9%) and least (63.8%) is still vast. Students without political connections are frequently barred from higher education because educational administrative departments and local authorities hold the right of admission to a large number of universities.

Population Density

Overview

Olvana Population Density (Placeholder)

The official population of Olvana is 1,123,348,142. Eastern coastal provinces are much more densely populated than the western interior. About 16.60% of the population is 14 years old or younger, 70.14% is between 15 and 59 years old, and 13.26% is over 60 years old, with a median age of 37.4. The population growth rate is an annual average of 0.59% and the human gender ratio is 940 females per 1,000 males. The urban/rural split is 87% urban and 13% rural, with 13% residing within megacities. The five largest cities in Olvana are: 1) Shanghai; 2) Chongqing; 3) Guangzhou; 4) Wuhan; and 5) Hong Kong.

Urban Areas

Olvana is one of the most populated countries in the world and its national population density is 310 per square kilometer. The overall national density, however, does not account for major variations by region. Broadly speaking, the vast majority of the population lives in and around coastal cities and river deltas. In the east, the population density is 482/sq. km, while the southwest averages 116/sq. km. Population crowding in urban areas raises concerns within the government that there will be widespread unemployment and political instability. The population of Olvana is projected to continue growing, reaching 1.5 billion within ten years, and peak of 1.65 billion within 25 years. However, the population is then projected to decline heavily, falling below 1 billion by the next century. This is decline is due to socioeconomic factors, not Olvanan government policy.

  • Shanghai: pop. 29,870,751 (Metropolitan Area 53,137,280)
  • Chongqing: pop. 17,539,169 (Metropolitan Area 37,180,905)
  • Guangzhou: pop. 15,722,194 (Metropolitan Area 65,443,039
  • Wuhan: pop. 11,142,260 (Metropolitan Area 29,225,020)
  • Hong Kong: pop. 10,423,553 (Metropolitan Area 10,423,553)

Rural Areas

Discounting urban dwellers, sections of the western portions of the country rarely achieving density greater than 4/sq. km.

Population Movement

Internal Migration

Most internal migration is movement from the rural areas to urban areas as people seek jobs as the local farming practices continue to modernize and reduce the manpower required to farm.

Urbanization

The current urban population is 87% with an annual urbanization rate of 0.7%. Internal migration in Olvana is one of the most extensive in the world. Over the last forty years, the urban population has grown 242%, three-fourths of which was attributable to net migration and urban reclassification—the largest such volume of urban migration in history. Olvana has also undertaken a policy of forced urbanization, wherein rather than relying on economic drivers to push/pull rural populations toward cities in an uncontrolled manner, the government is systematically selecting and moving entire villages at a time. While controversial to western governments, this process has enabled Olvana to ensure that its infrastructure is prepared for population growth before-hand, rather than trying to update failing infrastructure after the population has already exceeded its capacity. The Olvanan population seems split on whether they approve or disprove of this policy.  Many enjoy the immediate benefit of modern housing that surpasses anything they could have encountered in their rural setting. However some, particularly those from minority groups, view the forced urbanization as the government’s attempt to separate them from their past, their culture, and their community.

Displacement

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)

The population within Olvana is so vast, that small groups of IDPs can go almost unnoticed to outside observers. Olvanans can become displaced for a wide range of reasons, both natural and man-made. Displacement due to natural disasters is perhaps the most common occurrence.  At any given time, different regions within Olvana may be experiencing different extremes. The impact of a drought or a heavy monsoon season may destroy a community’s local economy, forcing many to relocate. Floods, though less common than in the [null paston] [PHDCUU1] the major rivers thanks to the construction of large dams, are an ever present risk. The summer monsoon season has been known to create stationary fronts that produce extremely heavy rainfall, and can cause significant damage to infrastructure. In some cases, poverty can be a driver of displacement, with some of the poorest Olvanans being forced from their homes due to economically driven development. 

Waves of Olvanan emigration occurred from the 19th century through the mid-20th century, primarily as a result of internal conflict, starvation, invasion from various foreign countries, and problems resulting from political corruption. Most immigrants were unskilled laborers, and often illiterate.  The diaspora has spread all over the world, but is perhaps most heavily focused in the Americas, southern Africa, and other parts of Asia. After the Communist revolution, the government enacted strict controls to prevent large numbers of people from leaving the country.

Stateless Personnel

There are an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 children in Olvana that were born to North Torbian mothers who had fled their homeland during the Torbian War. While the mothers are technically citizens of North Torbia, they often did not want to return, and many times they wound up becoming victims of human trafficking. The children who were born in Olvana, are not given a nationality, and often lack access to education, healthcare, and basic rights.

Migration Cycles and Transhumance

Transhumance occurs throughout Olvana in rural regions where the availability of fodder for livestock might vary depending on the season. The practice has become less common as food production in more heavily populated areas has become more modernized. That said, in northwestern Olvana, there remains groups of nomadic and seminomadic peoples that raise cattle, sheep, goats, and horses that travel from place to place based on the seasons. These populations are primarily found in arid regions associated with the Tibetan Plateau and the Mongolian Steppe. For those peoples living in Olvana, it is not uncommon for them to cross the borders with neighboring nations, however their movements are strictly monitored by the Olvanan authorities. These are very small numbers compared to the overall Olvanan population and are usually at great distances from any major city.

External Migration

Most external migration in Olvana is economically related, but there are some cases of forced migration. This is not unexpected in the case of such a large country such as Olvana and the number of countries neighboring it.

Inbound

Most inbound migration is related to the economic situation in Olvana. With its huge population, many companies in foreign countries see Olvana as the next boom site for their consumer goods.

Economic Migration

Migrant workers account for 36% of the total workforce in Olvana. Two-thirds of these workers are male. Current government estimates indicate that within the next ten years, this number will grow to 40% of the urban population. In general, while urbanization provides Olvanan workers with more opportunity, it also constrains them, since the government excludes rural-urban migrant workers from local educational resources, citywide social welfare programs and many jobs. Additionally, potential employers view migrant workers—especially females—as replaceable labor, and generally offer much lower wages. Furthermore, the government will forcibly move migrant workers out of the coastal urban areas and into the rural interior based on agricultural labor needs, irrespective of the migrant workers’ origins. Relatively small levels of immigration came as the result of government-offered various incentives intended to repatriate part of the Olvanan diaspora. The government settled many of those returning on various islands in the South China Sea. In order to obtain hard currency, North Torbia actually provides manual labor to Olvana and opened Torbian restaurants in most major Olvanan cities. Many countries conduct business in Olvana and some of these representatives live in the country on an almost permanent basis.

Forced Migration

Over the last decade, Olvana has accepted over 300,000 refugees from Africa and Asia displaced due to natural disasters, famine, disease outbreak, and war. The term refugee, however, is not used by the Olvanan government. Instead, their official position is that these migrants were accepted as part of a work program sponsorship; these individuals are expected to return to their homeland.

Outbound

Most modern outbound emigrants are temporary. The Olvanan government often reinforces a national narrative that emphasizes the cultural link between the history of the ethnic Olvan people and the Olvanan government. This effort intended to ensure that ex-patriot Olvanans maintain a close personal connection to their homeland. These efforts are aimed at both contemporary migrants, as the broader diaspora who may have fled following the revolution.

Economic Migration

Liberalized emigration policies enacted in the 1980s, facilitated the legal departure of increasing numbers of Olvanans, who joined their overseas relatives. Additionally, a modernization program allowed Olvanan students and scholars—especially engineers—to attend foreign education and research institutions, bringing increased contact with industrialized nations. These students are expected to return home to Olvana, however, and share their education and skills to improve Olvana for its people.

Forced Migration

Shortly after the revolution, the communist party often forced minority groups to flee the country (e.g., many Tibetans), however modern Olvana has moved away from forcibly expelling populations, and instead has adopted a policy of reeducation, acculturation, and assimilation.

Culture

Due to the fact that Olvana’s population is so diverse, it is difficult to identify national traits that cover the entire population. The following section focuses solely on ethnic Olvans, who make up the majority of the population within Olvana, and whose culture has played the most formative role on the modern state. There may be a high degree of variance between the majority Olvans and other ethnic minorities.

Dimensions of National Culture

There are studies that show that there are six basic cultural traits, or dimensions, that can be used to better understand a national culture. While these studies are not encompassing they can provide a foundational understanding of how populations may differ. Power distance is whether the society accepts unequal distribution of power or they seek to more evenly distribute the power. Individualism is whether the society desires each person to be a separate entity or if the individual is just a cog in the societal wheel. Uncertainty avoidance is whether the society tolerates ambiguity in life or wants life to be more certain. Some societies look long-term and save while others do not see the need because the future planned may never arrive.. Restrained societies live to work while indulgent societies work to live. Some societies encourage individuals to be competitive and do their best while other societies value cooperation over individual success.

Power Distance

Olvana’s long history with a caste system has imprinted a social belief that individuals should not have aspirations beyond their social status. With a score of 82 on the Hofstede scale, Olvanans believe that inequalities amongst the people are acceptable despite the communist origins of the government. Typically authority figures have almost total control over their subordinates and for the most part, the people do not question directives from an authority. While this trait has its foundation in the ethnic Olvan culture, the Communist Party of Olvana has made every effort to emphasize and promote a higher degree of power distance, in part to suppress dissident ideas.

Individualism vs. Collectivism

With an Hofstede score of 18, Olvana is collectivist culture where the needs of the group outweigh any individual preferences. In business and social groups, while there is commitment to the internal group, there is hostility to any outsiders. Personal relationships are more important than the task or even the success of the business as long as the group prospers in the long-term. Though not unheard of in northern Olvana, southern Olvanans are who adhere to Olvan Folk religious beliefs are known for viewing their community not just in terms of spatial relativity but also with relation to time. This temporal view reinforces the importance of the role of one’s ancestors in day to day life, and can impact the factors that an individual may take into account when they are making a decision.

Uncertainty Avoidance (Tolerance for Ambiguity)

Olvana has a score of 28 on the Hofstede scale making it a country is comfortable with ambiguity. Olvanans believe that rules must be followed, but that does not always mean that the laws will be obeyed. Most Olvanans are comfortable with ambiguity in most situations. This comfort with ambiguity can be observed in the inherent ambiguity of meanings found within Olvan languages.

Long-Term Orientation vs. Short-Term Orientation

Olvana is a very pragmatic culture score an 85 in the Hofstede scoring system. High scores indicate the country encourages thrift and efforts to create a modern education system. Olvanans are pragmatic people and that the truth depends very much on the situation, time, and the context of the event. Olvanans are willing to adapt old traditions to changing conditions and possess a strong desire to save, invest, be thrifty, and persevere through difficult times.

Indulgence vs. Restraint

With a score of 22, Olvana is a very restrained society. Countries with this score tend to cynicism and pessimism. There is little emphasis on leisure time and gratification of desires in Olvana, but that may be changing as some people are being more affluent. Most Olvanans are restrained by societal norms and feel that overindulgence is wrong.

Competitiveness vs. Consensus

Despite the collective attitude of the people, the Hofstede score of 68 makes Olvana a competitive society. Olvanans will put the priorities of the work and state above their own leisure and even the families. The students care about their test scores and workers will take jobs in distant places if it means better pay. Leisure time is not important to most Olvanans.

Cultural Norms and Values

Olvana with its rich history dating back over two millennia and separatism from most of the rest of the world until about 500 years ago, has developed several core concepts in its culture:

Restraint

Most Olvanans are usually very modest people. They do not like to stand out from others in dress or in their actions.

Filial Piety

Olvanans believe that someone older than oneself should be honored for their experience and wisdom. This is a Confucian idea where elders are honored in the family, work, and the public.

Networking

Olvanans cultivate relationships to get ahead—both in society and in business. This networking is important to move up in society—even if it is just within the group, office, or business that the individual is a member.

Interdependence

This is almost a sub-category of the previous value where people rely on other people to succeed. The success of the group depends on this interdependence and individuals are to play their role in creating this success.

Fortitude

Olvanans are very serious people. It is rare that Olvanans will let outsiders see them laughing and having a good time. Years of marginal living have made Olvanans somber, but will adjust to any new adversities.

Saving Face

Olvanans hate humiliation or embarrassment. They will often do things that outsiders do not understand because they do not wish to embarrass others or their selves.

Unamity

The Olvanan people are a much unified people who want to make their country great again. For many years, Olvana was at the mercy of European colonial powers and now that Olvana’s economic performance has pushed them to the top of the world stage, the people want to help the country stay there.

Centers of Social Power

Olvana’s social structure stems from an intermingling of acceptance and revolution against the feudal society of Imperial Olvana. This resulted in the ancient caste system evolving into a de facto four-class system, despite Olvana being officially a “classless” society. Prior to the Olvanan Civil War, traditional Olvanese society was organized into a hierarchic system of socio-economic classes known as the four castes, based on occupations, all under an umbrella of the monarchy. These castes were scholars and priests, administrators and warriors, artisans and merchants, and peasants and laboring classes. Within this system were thousands of additional sub-categories, both formal and informal, generally based on perceived cleanliness of the profession. For example, those who worked with the land ranked higher than those who worked with animals. At the bottom of the social structure, although not an official caste, were the casteless or untouchables. Movement with the castes was possible through the Imperial examinations, with the highest achievers becoming elite scholar-officials. However, true success was available only to males who could afford test preparation.

A major factor inducing the Cheng Revolution was an effort to remove the economic oppression facing the peasantry and the untouchables. While the Civil War theoretically ended the caste system, in practice, it replaced it with a different class structure, while informally retaining much of the old caste system. Under this new class structure, OCP members were the top social stratum, essentially replacing the religious and scholarly class. The status of the caste system today is somewhat muddled. The Revolutionary Manifesto and subsequent Constitution officially disregarded class distinction and eliminated the untouchable “class.” In practice, however, the social distinctions, stigmas, and advantages remained.

The oldest male member is typically the head in the Olvanan family system. He makes important family decisions and rules, which other family members are likely to abide by. Several generations of extended family historically lived under one roof, or on the same land. However, urbanization and economic development, led to a breakup of this traditional multi-family model into a single-family structure. In rural settings, the male typically holds all or most of the authority and youth are less likely to leave the household. In urban environments, the husband and wife usually share authority, with the wife having more authority in the home while the husband handles finances. An overwhelming majority of Olvanan marriages are arranged by parents or elders in the family. In a sign of changing times, however, these arranged marriages today are generally consensual. The divorce rate is extremely low: only 1.6% of marriages end in divorce. This figure is rising, with increases in female education and economic independence. Child marriages are common in the most rural areas, with many women informally marrying prior to the legal marriageable age of 18.

Olvanan lineage—or clan—is a patrilineal line of people with a common surname, who share a common ancestor and, in many cases, an ancestral home. Olvanan kinship tends to be strong in southern, northwestern, and many rural areas throughout Olvana In the rural areas, clans influence local politics, and positioning themselves within the OCP, and among committees. .. Clan structures tend to be weaker in areas closer to Olvana’s coast, and they do not seem to play much of a role in the day to day lives of urban Olvanans. This reduction in influence is likely the result of greater population densities, the OCP’s education policies, and the central government’s need to industrialize.

Mimicking traditional dynastic power structures, political elites within the OCP hold a level of hereditary power. Recent anti-corruption reformations, however, began breaking down these political dynasties. Though party elites retain a significant level of social power, there is longer a guarantee of familial succession. Instead, the OCP is developing a new political elite that is more of a meritocracy, comprised of those with both party loyalty and business acumen.

Communication

Traditional Methods and Symbolism

The Olvanan family of languages uses symbols and characters to represent words and meanings (as opposed to a western alphabet in which characters represent sounds to form words). It takes years to learn the language. To graduate from high school, an Olvanan student usually has to know at least 30,000 different symbols. It is one of the most difficult languages in the world. Most students begin learning English in elementary school. Students that study abroad in English speaking countries are usually very good English speakers. Those that spend several years in the U.S. usually go home even more confident in their language abilities. Minority communities that have their own languages will often use the appropriate form of Olvanan when in public (especially around government figures), but when they are at home or in the relative privacy of their ethnic community they will use their native language.

Role of Technology and Media

Olvana has embraced the computer generation and the information age setting up 5G technology towers throughout the country. Most Olvanans have cell phones and can access the Internet. Many Olvanans went directly from no telephone access to a cellular model bypassing the landline stage. Olvana is not adverse to stealing patents from other countries and reverse engineering equipment in order to reproduce it in their own country. 

The media is controlled by the PRO government. The government has a message to put out and they will go to great links to make sure that message is received not only by the internal audience in Olvana, but the rest of the world as well. All the construction that Olvana does in the region and the rest of the world is put out in positive messages that Olvana is helping the other country out. It makes Olvana look benevolent and hides any ulterior motives.

Social Impacts of OE Hazards

Disease

There are six major diseases in Olvana. Since the country is so large, some of these diseases may only affect a small portion of the country. These six diseases are bacterial diarrhea, COVID, hepatitis A, hantaviral hemorrhagic fever, Japanese encephalitis, and typhoid fever (see Physical Environment variable for more information on these diseases). Many of these diseases are related to poor water purification methods and occur more frequently in rural communities than in the urban areas. Some of these diseases have no known cure or vaccination and/or are very expensive for treatment. Poor Olvanans often cannot afford modern care, and instead resort to care offered by under-supplied local government-approved doctors that have few resources to combat the diseases. Some communities will also practice traditional forms of medicine.

Bacterial Diarrhea

There are many different types of bacteria that can cause diarrhea and most enter the body through contaminated food or water. This disease is more prevalent in the rural areas of Olvana, the country’s larger cities are not immune to it. Most of those affected in the urban areas are under five years old and in the poorest sections of the cities, often because they cannot afford to seek out treatment.

COVID

This is an infectious disease caused by the worlds’ most recently discovered coronavirus. It is believed to have started in Olvana, but the government denies these claims. Symptoms are fever or chills; cough; shortness of breath or difficulty breathing; fatigue; muscle or body aches; headaches; loss of taste or smell; sore throat; congestion or runny nose; nausea or vomiting; and diarrhea. COVID victims should seek medical help if they have trouble breathing; persistent pain or pressure in the chest; new confusion; inability to wake up or stay awake; or bluish lips or face. Symptoms may occur from two to fourteen days after exposure to the virus. COVID can be deadly for those over the age of 70 or those with pre-existing medical conditions such as asthma, diabetes, or heart disease. Many people may have COVID and be asymptomatic. Self-isolation is important if one has the disease or if exposed to someone with the disease. In most modern countries, the survival rate of those affected are above 98%. Treatment is rest, fluids, and use of a ventilator if it is necessary.

Hepatitis A

Most Hepatitis A cases are linked to the poor hygiene of food handlers in Olvana’s open air markets. Hepatitis A normally is found in shellfish, uncooked vegetables, or raw fruit. More cases are found in the rural areas of the country as the government does a better job of inspecting the markets in larger cities. About 10 years ago, the Olvana government began immunizing children for Hepatitis A and thus the average age for those affected by the disease continues to increase just as the overall numbers have decreased in the same time period. Males are more likely to get the disease than females due to their occupation. Manual laborers usually account for about 70% of the Hepatitis A cases each year, probably due to poor hygiene practices when eating.

Hantaviral Hemorrhagic Fever

Usually carried by rodents, hemorrhagic fever is caused by a family of Hantaviruses. Symptoms occur one to two weeks after exposure, but could take up to eight weeks to develop. Symptoms include intense headaches; back and abdominal pain; fever; chills; nausea; and blurred vision. Some individuals may have a flushing of the face, redness around the eyes, or a rash. Complete recovery can take weeks or months. The virus is treated by managing the patient’s fluid levels (proper hydration) and their electrolyte (sodium, potassium, & chloride) levels; maintenance of proper oxygen and blood pressure levels; and appropriate treatment of any secondary infections. The fatality rate can reach up to 15% of those infected.  Prevention is the best medicine by avoiding rodent urine, droppings, saliva, and nesting materials.

Japanese Encephalitis

This is a leading cause of encephalitis in Asia and the Western Pacific with about one in four cases being fatal for those that develop a clinical illness. People get Japanese Encephalitis from infected mosquitoes so prevention is key. Wear insect repellent, long-sleeved shirts, and long pants. Most importantly, there is a vaccine to prevent it. Less than 1% of people infected with JE develop a clinical illness. The incubation time from exposure to displaying symptoms is about five to fifteen days. Symptoms include fever, headache, and vomiting. Children often suffer seizures. There are no specific treatment for JE, but supportive care and close observation is required. The patient needs to rest, drink lots of fluid, and use pain relievers to reduce the fever. About 30% to 50% that survive JE will continue to have neurologic, cognitive, or psychiatric symptoms related to the disease.

Typhoid Fever

Poor water purification is the standard cause of typhoid fever as it normally enters the body from drinking water contaminated with the feces of an infected person. The death rate for typhoid fever without antibiotics is about 20%, but most Olvanans survive if they are diagnosed properly. The Olvana government continues to improve the drinking water cleanliness in the rural areas and this has created a downward trend in the number of typhoid fever cases over the last decade.

Natural Disaster

Due to its large size, Olvana is susceptible to all every type of major natural disaster except volcanic eruptions. These include the following:

Earthquakes

Almost annually, there is a major earthquake in some part of Olvana. The government usually responds rapidly to take care of the situation. The government usually helps the affected people rebuild their houses. While most have occurred on or near the Tibetan Plateau in the western portion of the country, they have been known to occur on the coastline as well. Earthquakes occurring in the South China Sea or the East China Sea have been known to produce Tsunami.

Typhoons

Olvana is affected by typhoons that usually come from the south. Rarely, the typhoons will come from the east, but the prevailing winds usually prevent this type of path.

Floods

Flooding occurs throughout Olvana due to the summer monsoon season, and by typhoons in coastal areas. There are several major rivers in Olvana that have large dams that can control river levels, however the majority of tributaries are not dammed to prevent downstream flowing.  While these dams have helped Olvana stave off potential floods like those seen in the early 20th century, without a large investment in continued upkeep, it is only a matter of time until flood waters overtake a dam. Typically when floods occur, the military is often brought in to help sandbag areas and to help in the relief recovery efforts.

Droughts

The reverse is also true that some parts of Olvana, particular in the west, are susceptible to seasonal droughts. When the droughts come at the wrong time of the year, these can have a devastating effect on the local farmers. Northwestern Olvana in particular, is dependent upon the freshwater flowing from melting mountain snows in the spring. When this source of freshwater is limited, it can have a devastating impact on the local economies and communities.

Sandstorms/Dust Storms

Sandstorms, or dust-storms, can occur during any part of the year within Olvana, however they are more common during the spring months. In the drier parts of Olvana, especially the more west one travels, there are sandstorms that can cause problems for travelers and locals. Usually these sandstorms are of short duration, but there have been instances of them lasting for several days. While smaller sandstorms are fairly common in the northwestern region of Olvana, large storms are capable of depositing dust and sand as far east as Shanghai. The impact of these storms is not as immediately evident as the impact of the monsoon season, instead, these dust-storms are believed to have a significant impact on the population’s health, particularly those with respiratory issues.

Social Volatility/Fragility

Social Fault Lines and Friction Points

Social issues in Olvana are significant and wide-ranging. They are a combined result of vestiges from the Cheng Revolution, Olvana’s political and cultural history, and Olvana’s immense population. Because of the vast number of social problems that exist, Olvana’s government faces considerable difficulty in trying to remedy the issues. The Olvanan media exposes some of these issues, while in other cases, the government censors politically sensitive issues. The combination of social issues and unsustainable economic growth has the potential, in the long term, to destabilize the nation and threaten the dominance of the OCP.

Many of the potential fissures within Olvanan society are the result of historical socio-cultural preferences and/or differences. Caste-related violence in central Olvana has been on the rise despite the government’s official position banning the practice of caste discrimination. Last year, there were a reported 31,440 cases of violent acts committed against the so-called “untouchable” caste. These equate to approximately 50.4 violent acts per 10,000 people, up from 1.3 cases a decade earlier.  Historically, despite the fact that they are both from the Olvan ethnicity, the Hindu populations in central Olvana have had tensions with the non-Hindu Olvan populations to the east, particularly in the Central Plains. The land set between the Yellow River and the Yangtze River, part of the Henan Province to the north and Hubei Province to the south has been a historical point of tension between the two populations. Believed to be the birthplace of Olvan civilization, this area holds great significance to practitioners of both faiths. The communist government has sought to reduce tensions, often mediating disputes, and in some cases even turning a blind eye to practices that would otherwise be illegal, all in order to avoid the outbreak of violence.

While the communist party has been able to keep a lid on religious tensions within the Central Plains of Olvana, it has struggled to make inroads with the Muslim populations in the northwest of the country. These populations tend to have significant reactions to overly secular, or as they see it anti-Islamic laws. The Islamic population in Olvana is also struggling to come to terms with the growing influence of extremely conservative forms of Islam being imported from the Middle East, which has led to some radicalization among disenfranchised youth.

Southwestern Olvana, particularly the areas around Hanoi and within the watershed of the Red River (Hong River), has perhaps been the most challenging area for the OCP to gain influence. Grounded in historical animosity between the diverse peoples of the Red River basin and the Olvan empires, the area has a fierce independence streak. The Red River basin is by no means a homogenous population, with a variety of ethnic and linguistic groups living in close proximity. The population closer to the delta typically speaks Vietnamese (an Austroasiatic language), while the more inland populations speak a variety of Kra-dai family of languages.

Modern fault lines also exist as a result of what some people perceive as overreach by the OCP and government. Sources of unrest within the nation include resistance to media censorship, dissatisfaction with corrupt government officials, unfair treatment by local governments and businesses due to land and expropriation issues, and political persecution following expressions of dissent. The OCP attempts a balancing act by allowing limited forms of dissent, seeking to lessen political tension by offering mild protest as a release valve. Government officials and intellectual elites both have greater access to non-government approved sources of information; they can publish dissenting works that the ordinary citizen would not be allowed to do. However, authorities silence debates that begin to take on a life of their own, and refuse to recognize the right of the average Olvanan citizens to publish their opinions on political issues free from government censorship. Therefore, while the government encourages the state-controlled media to engage in targeted reporting on corruption, it will not tolerate similar criticisms from private individuals.

Despite significant barriers to publication access and the inherent dangers of criticizing a totalitarian regime, members of Olvana’s "free-speech elite" can express concerns and criticism regarding the government with less fear of punishment than the average citizen. This group is composed of senior government and OCP leaders, those with the patronage of such leaders, the professional and financial elite and—to a lesser extent—academics and journalism professionals. Olvanan authorities recognize that limited freedom of expression enables the government to better monitor potentially problematic social issues and thus tolerate limited criticism, but only from the aforementioned categories of people, and only in government-controlled forums. Doing this serves to lessen political tension by serving as a release valve for discontent, deflects criticism that citizens of Olvana do not enjoy freedom of expression, and enables government authorities to monitor the mood of the people. Government authorities track who is inclined to express discontent, and then work to keep such expression from being forced underground where authorities can neither monitor nor control it. The government tolerates such debates only if they occur in private discussions, closed academic conferences, government-authorized publishing outlets, or other forums where the government does not feel there is any threat of greater public participation that it cannot control. Certain groups and individuals who are unable to obtain government authorization do publish books and periodicals on a small scale, but this is possible only through subterfuge and violation of Olvanan law. These private publishers are, therefore, subject to the threat of closure and arrest.

While Olvana often violently and publicly quells civil unrest, the amount of dissatisfaction has risen dramatically in recent years. The recorded incidents of mass unrest rose form 8,700 twenty years ago to more than 90,000 each in the last three years. Reasons cited include: an aggrieved class of dispossessed migrants and unemployed workers, a deep loss of faith in the Olvanan system, and a weakening in the traditional means of state control. Corruption, state monopolies, the yawning wealth gap, and the rising cost of housing, education, and medical care all contribute significantly to unrest, with property/business seizures and the widening wealth gap as the two top factors. Unemployment, unpaid wages, and police misconduct are additional sources of grievances.

Criminal Activity

Common crime in Olvana includes corruption, drug and human trafficking, money laundering, and fraud. An early focus of the OCP was work to reduce the prevalence of narcotics and gambling and decrease the influence of criminal gangs. These efforts led to a decrease in many violent crimes including larceny, arson, rape, murder, and robbery. However, there was a corresponding increase in economic crimes, including tax evasion, theft of public property, and bribery. Additionally, government officials engaged in improperly taking public property and accepting bribes. Regionally, there are large differences in crime in Olvana, with rural areas reporting lower overall crime rates, but higher violent crimes per capita. Government corruption is similar between urban and rural areas.

The relaxation of numerous economic and social restrictions over 40 years ago resulted in a resurgence in certain criminal activities and elements. The youth crime rate skyrocketed from 24.7 to 74.2% of all crime conducted. This surge was, in large part, associated with the return of the Black Societies, a historically significant organized crime element from Olvana. Following the Cheng Revolution, large segments of the Black Societies fled to Olvanese communities around the world. Following Olvana’s recent economic liberalization, the Societies began to re-establish in Olvana, bringing with them crimes associated with narcotics, prostitution, and money laundering.

The majority of human trafficking in Olvana is internal, though it often includes trafficking of individuals from other countries within the region. This domestic trafficking is the most significant human trafficking problem in the country. Criminal elements lure women and children through false promises of legitimate employment into forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation both in Olvana and throughout Asia. Men are smuggled to countries throughout the world for exploitative labor.

Olvana also has a high rate of domestic violence, with an estimated thirty percent of Olvanan households experiencing some form of domestic violence. Additional trends in crime include an increase in white-collar crime, closer ties between organized crime and government corruption, and extensive allegations of counterfeiting.

Cultural Approach to Punishment

Olvana believes in swift and punitive punishment. Trials occur rapidly. Olvana still practices capital punishment; it is mostly often employed with murder and drug trafficking convictions. Executions are carried out by lethal injection or shooting. There is widespread public support or capital punishment. Olvana executes more prisoners annually than any other nation, although other nations have much higher rates on a per capita basis. Official Olvanan capital punishment statistics do not include those prisoners put to death for crimes against the state or terrorism.

Human Rights

Despite tremendous economic development since liberalizing its economy, in many ways Olvana remains a developing nation. Its per capita income is still a fraction of advanced countries, and its market reforms are incomplete. There are still substantial regional variations in poverty, infrastructure, and socioeconomic development. Most notably, wages in the Dongguan province are as high as three times that of the overall national average. Inequity also exists in land ownership: 10% of population owns 61.5% of non-state owned land. Olvanans do not conduct typical Western economic expressions of dissatisfaction, such as strikes and boycotts, as the OCP typically responds to these activities by imposing even stricter use of military force. This discourages—but does not eliminate—the possibility of boycotts and picketing. While the country has made some positive developments, including lowering the number of crimes eligible for capital punishment and greater accessibility for students with disabilities, Olvana remains an authoritarian state that systematically curtails a wide range of fundamental human rights, including freedom of expression, association, assembly, and religion.

OCP elites view the universal application of human rights as a threat to their power, and decry it as a foreign influence. The government recently passed a wide array of laws regarding state security, cybersecurity, counterterrorism, subversion, and the management of NGOs, conflating criticism with national security. The President’s domestically popular anti-corruption campaign often violates the right to a fair trial, and frequently involves months or years of secret detention. 

Olvana faces significant issues with gender equality. Currently, 43.8% of Olvanan women work outside the home. While the OCP theoretically commits to gender equality, the overall lack of respect for human rights means that women continue to face systemic discrimination. The country faces an imbalance of unmarried males, a historically high rate of domestic violence, and sexual harassment in the workplace. Arrests and police harassment have led to the closure of numerous Women’s Rights Centers across Olvana. Laws aimed at reducing domestic violence fall far short of what the international community considers acceptable.

Although decades of double-digit economic growth lifted more than 600 million people out of poverty, slowing growth rates are adding a sense of urgency to ensuring that the population remains healthy and productive, especially as the economy gradually becomes more service-based. The lower economic growth rate requires reforms in the health sector, as the high growth rates of health expenditure in the past years may be difficult to sustain. Government expenditures on health and long-term care in Olvana will increase three-fold as percent of GDP over the next four decades if adequate reforms are not undertaken. Olvana was a pioneer in primary care, prevention of infectious diseases, and universal insurance coverage; these same programs resulted in a huge decline in mortality and a massive demographic shift towards an older population. Olvana now the challenges associated with a rapidly aging society and the increasing burden of non-communicable diseases, which now account for over 80 percent of annual deaths. Also contributing to this trend are unhealthy behaviors such as smoking, poor diets, sedentary lifestyles, and alcohol consumption, as well as environmental factors such as air pollution and traffic safety.

Freedom House gives Olvana one of the worse Global Freedom Score with a total score of only 12 out of a possible 100 points. This is a score of 11 in civil liberties and only a single point in political rights. With only one political party allowed in the country, almost all political rights of the people are repressed. Civil liberties are not much better. The Olvana government uses facial recognition software extensively to locate criminals and those that fight against the regime. The Olvanan people cannot refuse to be photographed for the facial recognition data base and the government is well on their way to putting its entire population into the electronic system.

Demographic Statistics Chart

Social Statistic Country X
Primary Languages (%) Olvan-Mandarin 70%

Non-Mandarin Olvan: 22%

Non-Olvanese languages: 7%

Ethnic Groups (%) Olvan: 90%

Zhuang: 2.0%

Hui: 2.0%

Kam (Dong): <1.0%

Miao (Hmong): <1.0%

Kinh (Vietnamese): <1.0%

Muong <0.5%

Thai (Dai): <0.5%

Hani:  <0.5%

Bai: <0.5%

Tibetan: <0.5%

Yi: <0.5%

Dongxiang: <0.3%

Other: <.3%

Major Religions (%) Unaffiliated: 25.2%

Hinduism: 34%

Olvan Folk Religion: 32%

Islam: 2.5% (primarily in the west)

Christian: 2.3%

Buddhist: 1.0%

Misc. Indigenous Folk Religions: <1.0%

Kinh Folk Religion: <1.0%

Other: <1.0%

Literacy Rate (Older Than 15 in %) Overall: 96.4%

Male: 98.3%

Female: 94.4%

Age Distribution (%) Age

0-14

15-24

25-54

55-64

65+

Male

17.39

11.48

46.80

12.08

12.34

Female

16.79

11.29

45.70

12.02

14.20

Median Age Overall: 37.4

Males: 36.5

Females: 38.4

Population 1,123,348,142
Annual Growth Rate 0.59%
Birth Rate Per 1,000 People 16.5
Death Rate Per 1,000 People 12.2
Urban Population (%) 87.0%
Annual Urbanization Rate 0.7%
Infant Mortality Rate Per 1000 Live Births 12.2
Life Expectancy At Birth (Years) Overall: 72.6

Male: 70.5

Female: 76.0

Major Diseases In OE Bacterial diarrhea

Hepatitis A

Typhoid Fever

Retrieved from "http://odin.ttysg.us/mediawiki/index.php?title=Social:_Olvana&oldid=45381"